Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series

<p>The Stockton Deep Water Ship Channel, a stretch of the tidal San Joaquin River, is frequently subject to low dissolved oxygen conditions and annually violates regional water quality objectives. Underlying mechanisms are examined here using the long-term water quality data, and the efficacy...

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Main Authors: Alan Jassby, Erwin E. Van Nieuwenhuyse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2005-09-01
Series:San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/0tb0f19p
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spelling doaj-ac8ac974ef9145f9b955b0f8cd823d602020-11-24T23:50:17ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaSan Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science1546-23662005-09-0132ark:13030/qt0tb0f19pLow Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time SeriesAlan Jassby0Erwin E. Van Nieuwenhuyse1University of California, DavisU.S. Bureau of Reclamation<p>The Stockton Deep Water Ship Channel, a stretch of the tidal San Joaquin River, is frequently subject to low dissolved oxygen conditions and annually violates regional water quality objectives. Underlying mechanisms are examined here using the long-term water quality data, and the efficacy of possible solutions using time-series regression models. Hypoxia is most common during June-September, immediately downstream of where the river enters the Ship Channel. At the annual scale, ammonium loading from the Regional Wastewater Control Facility has the largest identifiable effect on year-to-year variability. The longer-term upward trend in ammonium loads, which have been increasing over 10% per year, also corresponds to a longer-term downward trend in dissolved oxygen during summer. At the monthly scale, river flow, loading of wastewater ammonium and river phytoplankton, Ship Channel temperature, and Ship Channel phytoplankton are all significant in determining hypoxia. Over the recent historical range (1983–2003), wastewater ammonium and river phytoplankton have played a similar role in the monthly variability of the dissolved oxygen deficit, but river discharge has the strongest effect. Model scenarios imply that control of either river phytoplankton or wastewater ammonium load alone would be insufficient to eliminate hypoxia. Both must be strongly reduced, or reduction of one must be combined with increases in net discharge to the Ship Channel. Model scenarios imply that preventing discharge down Old River with a barrier markedly reduces hypoxia in the Ship Channel. With the Old River barrier in place, unimpaired or full natural flow at Vernalis would have led to about the same frequency of hypoxia that has occurred with actual flows since the early 1980s.</p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/0tb0f19pAmmoniumdissolved oxygenestuaryflowhypoxiatime series modelphytoplanktonriverwastewaterwater quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan Jassby
Erwin E. Van Nieuwenhuyse
spellingShingle Alan Jassby
Erwin E. Van Nieuwenhuyse
Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Ammonium
dissolved oxygen
estuary
flow
hypoxia
time series model
phytoplankton
river
wastewater
water quality
author_facet Alan Jassby
Erwin E. Van Nieuwenhuyse
author_sort Alan Jassby
title Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
title_short Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
title_full Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
title_fullStr Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
title_full_unstemmed Low Dissolved Oxygen in an Estuarine Channel (San Joaquin River, California): Mechanisms and Models Based on Long-term Time Series
title_sort low dissolved oxygen in an estuarine channel (san joaquin river, california): mechanisms and models based on long-term time series
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
issn 1546-2366
publishDate 2005-09-01
description <p>The Stockton Deep Water Ship Channel, a stretch of the tidal San Joaquin River, is frequently subject to low dissolved oxygen conditions and annually violates regional water quality objectives. Underlying mechanisms are examined here using the long-term water quality data, and the efficacy of possible solutions using time-series regression models. Hypoxia is most common during June-September, immediately downstream of where the river enters the Ship Channel. At the annual scale, ammonium loading from the Regional Wastewater Control Facility has the largest identifiable effect on year-to-year variability. The longer-term upward trend in ammonium loads, which have been increasing over 10% per year, also corresponds to a longer-term downward trend in dissolved oxygen during summer. At the monthly scale, river flow, loading of wastewater ammonium and river phytoplankton, Ship Channel temperature, and Ship Channel phytoplankton are all significant in determining hypoxia. Over the recent historical range (1983–2003), wastewater ammonium and river phytoplankton have played a similar role in the monthly variability of the dissolved oxygen deficit, but river discharge has the strongest effect. Model scenarios imply that control of either river phytoplankton or wastewater ammonium load alone would be insufficient to eliminate hypoxia. Both must be strongly reduced, or reduction of one must be combined with increases in net discharge to the Ship Channel. Model scenarios imply that preventing discharge down Old River with a barrier markedly reduces hypoxia in the Ship Channel. With the Old River barrier in place, unimpaired or full natural flow at Vernalis would have led to about the same frequency of hypoxia that has occurred with actual flows since the early 1980s.</p>
topic Ammonium
dissolved oxygen
estuary
flow
hypoxia
time series model
phytoplankton
river
wastewater
water quality
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/0tb0f19p
work_keys_str_mv AT alanjassby lowdissolvedoxygeninanestuarinechannelsanjoaquinrivercaliforniamechanismsandmodelsbasedonlongtermtimeseries
AT erwinevannieuwenhuyse lowdissolvedoxygeninanestuarinechannelsanjoaquinrivercaliforniamechanismsandmodelsbasedonlongtermtimeseries
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