George Mason Studies of the Tidal Potomac River - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 58
About This Presentation
Title:

George Mason Studies of the Tidal Potomac River

Description:

... parts of Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania and the entire District ... and undergraduate students have participated in field and lab data collections ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:181
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 59
Provided by: rchris
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: George Mason Studies of the Tidal Potomac River


1
George Mason Studies of the Tidal Potomac River
  • R. Christian Jones
  • Department of Environmental Science and Policy
  • Potomac Environmental Research and Education
    Center
  • George Mason University
  • Fairfax, Virginia, USA

2
Potomac Watershed
  • Potomac is a subwatershed of the Chesapeake Bay
  • The second largest encompassing parts of
    Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, Pennsylvania
    and the entire District of Columbia

3
Potomac Watershed
  • The Potomac traverses 383 miles (616 km)
  • Its watershed is 14,679 mi2
  • A major tributary is the Shenandoah which
    branches at Harpers Ferry

4
Potomac Watershed
  • Human population is concentrated in the lower
    middle section of the Potomac near the fall line
  • Above that is an area of intensive farming and
    beyond that forests are dominant

5
Potomac Watershed
  • The watershed has 4 major physiographic (terrain)
    provinces
  • The Coastal Plain consists of unconsolidated
    rocks (marine deposits that have never been
    compressed into rock)
  • The boundary between the Coastal Plain and the
    Piedmont is called the Fall Line

6
Potomac Watershed
  • Climatically, the Potomac Watershed is considered
    Human Subtropical to Humid Temperate
  • Temperature varies seasonally, mean from near
    freezing in January to about 80oF in July and
    August
  • Rainfall is fairly evenly distributed throughout
    the year with about 3-4 inches per month

7
Potomac Watershed
  • Last 10 years of flow data
  • Note annual pattern is generally consistent, but
    never exactly the same
  • Generally, high flows in the winter and spring
    with lower amounts in summer and fall

8
Potomac Watershed
  • Fall Line at Great Falls
  • River changes from flowing to tidal

9
Tidal Potomac River
  • Part of the Chesapeake Bay tidal system
  • Salinity zones
  • Tidal Freshwater (tidal river) lt0.5 ppt
  • Oligohaline (transition zone) 0.5-6 ppt
  • Mesohaline (estuary) 6-14 ppt

10
Tidal Freshwater Potomac
  • Tidal freshwater Potomac consists of deep
    channel, shallower flanks, and much shallower
    embayments
  • Being a heavily urbanized area (about 4 million
    people), numerous sewage treatment plants
    discharge effluent
  • Note Blue Plains and Lower Potomac
  • A major study area is Gunston Cove located about
    2/3 down the tidal fresh section of the river

11
Historic Distribution of Submersed Macrophytes in
the Tidal Potomac
  • According to maps and early papers summarized by
    Carter et al. (1985), submersed macrophytes
    occupied virtually all shallow water habitat at
    the turn of the 20th century
  • Gunston Cove was included

12
Macrophyte Distribution in 1980
  • Anecdotal records indicate that by 1939,
    submersed macrophytes had declined strongly and
    disappeared from much of their original habitat
  • An outbreak of water chestnut (floating
    macrophyte) was observed in the 1940s and in the
    lower tidal river, Myriophyllum spicatum invaded
    for a brief time
  • Surveys done in 1978-81 indicate only very sparse
    and widely scattered beds
  • Note no submersed macrophytes were found in
    Gunston Cove

13
P Loading and Cyanobacterial Blooms
  • Fueled by nutrient inputs from a burgeoning human
    population and resulting increases in P inputs,
    phytoplankton took over as dominant primary
    producers by about 1930.
  • By the 1960s large blooms of cyanobacteria were
    present over most of the tidal freshwater Potomac
    River during late summer months
  • Point Source P Loading to the Tidal Potomac
    (kg/day)
  • 32,200
  • 7,700
  • 1984 400

14
Tidal Potomac Food Web
Nutrients P
Light
  • Understanding water quality and living resources
    in the tidal Potomac involves obtaining a more
    detailed understanding of the food web in the
    river

Phytoplankton
Submersed Macrophytes (SAV)
Invertebrates (zooplankton benthos)
Fish
15
George Mason Studies Doctoral Dissertations
  • Jack Harper. 1988. Effects of summer storms on
    the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac River
    embayment.
  • James Coles. 1994. The effects of temperature and
    light intensity on the dynamics of dominant
    Potomac River phytoplankton.
  • Steve Zylstra. 1994. Community structure
    indicators for monitoring tidal freshwater marsh
    systems on the Potomac River, Virginia.
  • Daniel Sklarew. 2000. Tidal freshwater Potomac
    River eutrophication patterns and relations to
    climate change, nutrient management, and in situ
    factors.
  • Nancy Rybicki. 2000. Relationships between
    environmental variables and species of submersed
    aquatic vegetation in the Potomac River,
    1985-1997.
  • Saiful Islam. 2001. Seasonal dynamics of micro-,
    nanno-, and picoplankton in the tidal freshwater
    Potomac River in and around Gunston Cove.
  • Leila J. Hamdan. 2003. Source, chemical
    composition and bacterial utilization of
    dissolved labile organic carbon in the Potomac
    River estuary.

16
George Mason Studies Doctoral Dissertations
  • Joseph Ivers. 2003. Distribution and abundance of
    fishes relating to artificial aquatic macrophytes
    in the tidal Potomac River.
  • Cassi L. Walls. 2004. Sedimentary fatty acids and
    sterols in the Potomac river.
  • Cindy Smith. 2004. Distribution and abundance of
    macroinvertebrate communities in artificial beds
    of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV).
  • Theresa Connor. 2005. Temperature and food as
    factors affecting the population ecology of
    Bosmina longirostris (O.F. Muller, 1785) and
    Diaphanosoma brachyurum (Lieven, 1848).
  • Phillip Ryan McEachern. 2005.Hydrophobic organic
    compounds in sediments of the Potomac River
    Watershed.
  • Ryan Albert. 2007. The influence of past and
    future urbanization on watershed nitrogen export
    and hydrology dynamics in two mid-Atlantic
    watersheds in Fairfax, Virginia.

17
George Mason Studies Masters Theses
  • James David Simons. 1984. Seasonal changes in
    primary production, physiognomy and flux of
    organic carbon in a freshwater tidal marsh.
  • Sue Anne Touart. 1988. Seasonal and spatial
    distribution of ichthyoplankton of Gunston Cove,
    a freshwater tidal embayment.
  • Kathy Monk. 1988. The influence of submerged
    aquatic vegetation on zooplankton abundance and
    diversity in the tidal freshwater Potomac River.
  • Allan Hide. 1989. The effects of zooplankton
    grazing on phytoplankton biomass and species
    composition in an hypereutrophic tidal freshwater
    river.
  • Susan R. Kircher. 1990. The effect of pH on the
    release of phosphorus from the sediments of
    Gunston Cove, Virginia.
  • William Oerlein. 1990. Sediment phosphorus
    available to phytoplankton as a function of pH in
    Pohick Bay, Virginia.
  • Steve Blumenshine. 1992. Spatial and temporal
    variation in the diet of the White Perch, Morone
    americana, in a tidal freshwater embayment.

18
George Mason Studies Masters Theses
  • Angela Thorp. 1992. The role of submersed aquatic
    vegetation in structuring macroinvertebrate
    communities in the tidal Potomac River.
  • Teresa Connor. 1992. Field and laboratory studies
    of the population dynamics, survival, and
    reproduction by Bosmina longirostris.
  • Thomas H. Hollowell. 1992. Site profiles for
    tidal freshwater Potomac River candidates for
    inclusion in the Chesapeake Bay National
    Estuarine Research Reserve System in Virginia.
  • Jessica Ann Hopple. 1994. Fate of hydrophobic
    organochlorine compounds in Hydrilla verticillata
    relative to sediments in the tidal Potomac River.
    MS. Chemistry.
  • Steve Winesett. 1996. The impact of heavy metals
    on Diptera Chironomidae in the tidal freshwater
    Potomac River.
  • Stephen Lynn Leathery. 1999. Lower non-tidal
    Potomac River fish monitoring and habitat
    characterization a study supporting American
    shad restoration.

19
George Mason Studies Masters Theses
  • Leila J. Hamdan. 2000. Dissolved labile organic
    carbon and bacterial abundance in the Potomac
    River.
  • Jeanet Ewing. 2004. A quantitative analysis of
    phytoplankton in the tidal freshwater Potomac
    River using high performance liquid
    chromatography.
  • Jeanne M. Classen. 2004. Temporal and spatial
    variations in bacterial community composition in
    the mesohaline Potomac River.
  • Christopher Ruck. 2006. An assessment of juvenile
    anadromous fishes (Alosa aestivalis, A.
    pseudoharengus, and Morone americana) in a tidal
    freshwater embayment of the Potomac River.
  • Christopher R. Stone. 2006. Geology of a bayhead
    delta within a Potomac River tidal-freshwater
    estuary Pohick Bay, Virginia.
  • Daemian Schreiber. 2006. Population genetics of
    American shad (Alosa sapidissima, Wilson 1811)
    and alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus, Wislon 1811)
    from the Potomac River and tributaries in
    Virginia.

20
Tidal Potomac Food Web
Nutrients P
Tributary Flow
Light
  • The linkage between phytoplankton and its driving
    variables (light, nutrients, and tributary
    inflow) has been an important focus of our
    research
  • Phytoplankton is a crucial food resource and has
    important effects on water quality

Phytoplankton
Submersed Macrophytes (SAV)
Invertebrates (zooplankton benthos)
Fish
21
Gunston CoveMajor Study Site
  • Gunston Cove is a shallow embayment located about
    midway in the tidal freshwater part of the
    Potomac
  • It receives runoff from the suburban Accotink
    Creek and Pohick watersheds
  • It also receives treated sewage from the Noman
    Cole Pollution Control Plant of Fairfax County

22
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • Phytoplankton and forcing factors measured on a
    daily basis over a 4 month period, mid-June to
    mid-Oct, 1986
  • Focus on two cove stations
  • Forcing factors from storms included
  • Solar radiation
  • Tributary input

23
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • Solar radiation peaked in late June at time of
    summer solstice and declined through the study
    period
  • Large variation from day to day reflected cloud
    cover
  • Note the alternation between several days of
    relatively high light followed by 1-2 days of low
    light and then back to higher
  • marks at the bottom indicate cold front
    passage, which many times corresponded to low
    light days

24
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • Another factor that reflected summer storms is
    the volume of runoff entering the cove from
    tributary streams
  • Note that during the early days of the study
    tributary flow into the cove was rather limited
  • However, beginning in mid July and extending
    through the end of August there were frequent
    periods of high tributary flows indicating that
    cold front passage was accompanied by more
    precipitation and thus higher runoff
  • In Sept and early Oct tributary flow declined to
    low levels

25
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • Chlorophyll a which is an indicator of
    phytoplankton biomass increased steadily in late
    June-early July to a peak in mid July in the Cove
    (Sta710)
  • A steady decline was observed through mid August
    and then a slight peak in mid September before
    finally dropping off in mid October
  • Note that the values observed in the cove were
    generally over 100 ug/L which is very high
  • Note that in the river values were much lower

26
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • If we line up the stream flow graph and the
    chlorophyll graph, we see that the periods of
    high and increasing chlorophyll correspond to low
    tributary stream input (late June-early July
    mid-Sept)
  • Likewise the period of higher tributary inflow
    from mid July to mid August witnessed a decline
    in phytoplankton
  • These results suggest that tributary input from
    summer storms decreases phytoplankton

27
Jackson Harper Dissertation Effects of summer
storms on the phytoplankton of a tidal Potomac
River embayment
  • Using the light and tributary flow data and dye
    studies to track the movement of water, Harper
    came up with a model describing the impact of
    summer storms
  • From this, he developed a description of the
    parameters of an average cyclic response of the
    system to summer storms
  • The cycle had an average period of about 5 days

28
Jim Coles Dissertation The effects of
temperature and light intensity on the dynamics
of dominant Potomac River phytoplankton.
  • Jim Coles examined the temperature and light
    responses of 4 species of phytoplankton isolated
    from the Gunston Cove area
  • Three were cyanobacteria and one was a diatom
  • Microcystis
  • Merismopedia
  • Oscillatoria
  • Melosira

Merismopedia
Microcystis
Melosira
Oscillatoria
29
Jim Coles Dissertation The effects of
temperature and light intensity on the dynamics
of dominant Potomac River phytoplankton.
  • Algae typically show an increase in
    photosynthesis with increasing light until a
    certain level light saturation is reached, then
    level off or decrease at higher light
  • These rates often increase with temperature

30
Jim Coles Dissertation The effects of
temperature and light intensity on the dynamics
of dominant Potomac River phytoplankton.
  • In these experiments, the diatom showed a
    temperature effect only up to 20oC, but did not
    show high light inhibition (it is found in spring
    with high light and lower temps)
  • The cyanobacteria continued to increase with
    temperature up to 30oC, but dropped off at high
    light (they are characteristic of late summer
    with high temps, but decreasing light)

31
Saiful Islam Dissertation Seasonal dynamics of
micro-, nanno-, and picoplankton in the tidal
freshwater Potomac River in and around Gunston
Cove.
  • Phytoplankton come in a range of sizes
  • Microplankton (gt20 um)
  • Nannoplankton (2-20 um)
  • Picoplankton (lt2 um)
  • These can be separated using sequential
    filtration through ever small filters
  • Islam looked at the seasonal dynamics of the
    different size fractions in Gunston Cove

32
Saiful Islam Dissertation Seasonal dynamics of
micro-, nanno-, and picoplankton in the tidal
freshwater Potomac River in and around Gunston
Cove.
  • He found that nannoplankton were most important
    in spring
  • Microplankton took over in late spring and
    remained dominant for most of the remainder of
    the year
  • A peak in late August in nannoplankton was found
  • Picoplankton were the least abundant always
  • These patterns would affect food availability for
    invertebrates zooplankton who select food based
    on size

33
Tidal Potomac Food Web
Nutrients P
Light
  • Another focus of our research has been to
    understand how the presence of SAV may alter the
    invertebrate community
  • This would have indirect effects on the fish
    which utilize the invertebrates as a food source

Phytoplankton
Submersed Macrophytes (SAV)
Invertebrates (zooplankton benthos)
Fish
34
Angela Thorp ThesisThe role of submersed aquatic
vegetation in structuring macroinvertebrate
communities in the tidal Potomac River
  • Thorpe compared the macroinvertebrates in two
    types of SAV beds with those in adjacent open
    waters
  • Hypothesis was that SAV would harbor more
    invertebrates and a greater diversity
  • The aquatic macrophyte community provides a
    different habitat than the open water which could
    lead to a greater abundance and diversity of
    invertebrates

35
Angela Thorp ThesisThe role of submersed aquatic
vegetation in structuring macroinvertebrate
communities in the tidal Potomac River
  • She found a wide array of macroinvertebrates in
    the SAV bed and much more limited numbers and
    diversity in open water

36
Angela Thorp ThesisThe role of submersed aquatic
vegetation in structuring macroinvertebrate
communities in the tidal Potomac River
  • Interestingly, the differences between the types
    of plants was small even when compared to
    differences between months
  • Open water samples group on left
  • On right SAV samples group not by SAV type, but
    by month
  • These results substantiate the potential
    importance of SAV beds as a food source for fish

37
Kathy Monk Thesis The influence of submerged
aquatic vegetation on zooplankton abundance and
diversity in the tidal freshwater Potomac River
  • Monk looked at zooplankton in a similar way that
    Thorpe looked at macroinvertebrates
  • Zooplankton are smaller organisms, some of which
    do well in the open water
  • However, SAV beds provide cover and possibly more
    or better food for zooplankton
  • Like Thorp, Monk compared the macroinvertebrates
    in two types of SAV beds with those in adjacent
    open waters
  • Hypothesis was that SAV would harbor more
    zooplankton and a greater diversity

38
Kathy Monk Thesis The influence of submerged
aquatic vegetation on zooplankton abundance and
diversity in the tidal freshwater Potomac River
  • All groups were found in greater numbers in the
    SAV beds
  • Some groups were much more common in the SAV
    beds, for example ostracods and some cladocera

39
Kathy Monk Thesis The influence of submerged
aquatic vegetation on zooplankton abundance and
diversity in the tidal freshwater Potomac River
  • Monk also found a clear difference between the
    zooplankton community in the open water and that
    in the vegetation treatments
  • This indicates the importance of the SAV beds as
    a habitat for many species of zooplankton
  • And their potential importance as a feeding area
    for fish

40
Since 1983/84, water quality, plankton, fish and
benthos have been monitor-ed on a generally
semimonthly basis at a number of sites in the
Gunston Cove area.
Noman Cole PCP
Monitoring Site Key ? water quality and
plankton ?fish trawl fish seine
41
Water Quality and Plankton VariablesGunston Cove
Study
  • Water Quality Variables
  • Temperature
  • Conductivity
  • Dissolved oxygen
  • pH
  • N NO3-, NH4, organic N
  • P PO4-3, Total P
  • BOD
  • TSS, VSS
  • Chloride
  • Alkalinity
  • Plankton Variables
  • Surface Chlorophyll a
  • Chlorophyll a
  • Photosynthetic rate (mgC/L/hr) at light sat.
  • PBmax (mgC/mgChla/hr)
  • Phytoplankton cell density by species
  • Phytoplankton biovolume by species
  • Microzooplankton (44 µm net) abundance
  • Macrozooplankton (202 µm net) abundance

42
Water Quality and Submersed Macrophyte Variables
  • Water Quality Variables
  • Temperature
  • Conductivity
  • Dissolved oxygen
  • pH
  • N NO3-, NH4, organic N
  • P PO4-3, Part. P,Total P
  • BOD
  • TSS, VSS
  • Chloride
  • Alkalinity
  • Chlorophyll a
  • Secchi depth
  • Submersed Macrophytes
  • 1994-2006
  • Areal coverage using aircraft remote sensing
  • Data collected by Virginia Institute for Marine
    Studies for the Chesapeake Bay program
  • Pre 1994
  • USGS field surveys
  • GMU field surveys

43
Water Quality Data Analysis
  • Summer data (June-September) utilized
  • Utilized one cove station (Station 7) that has
    been sampled continuously over the period
    1983-2006
  • Scatterplot by year over the study period
  • LOWESS smoothing function applied
  • Linear trends also tested over the study period
  • Regression coefficients determined for
    significant linear trends
  • Pre-1983 data were examined to place current
    study in context

44
Gunston Cove StationTotal Phosphorus
  • P is limiting nutrient in this system
  • Summer total phosphorus showed little change from
    1983 through 1988
  • Summer total phosphorus decreased consistently
    from 1989 through 2006
  • Linear trend highly significant with a slope of
    -0.0044 mg/L per yr or 0.10 mg/L over the period
    of record.
  • P load decrease was complete by early 1980s. Yet
    TP decrease doesnt seem to start until 1990? Or
    was the 1983-88 period just a pause in a decline
    in TP that started earlier?

45
Gunston Cove StationChlorophyll a
  • Chlorophyll a levels have decreased substantially
    over the period.
  • In the mid to late 1980s chlorophyll a
    frequently exceeded 100 ug/L.
  • Decline started in 1990 and quickened after 2000
  • By 2006 values were generally less than 30 ug/L
    with a median of about 20.
  • Linear regression yielded a significant linear
    decline at a rate of -3.8 ug/L per year or 84
    ug/L over the entire study
  • Again, did the chlorophyll decline start in 1990
    or was this only part of a longer chlorophyll
    decline?

46
Gunston Cove StationTP Extended Record
  • Limited data from 1969/70 indicates that TP was
    much higher at that time
  • So, perhaps what appeared to be a lag or delayed
    response was actually just a pause in the
    loading-induced TP decline
  • The pause was associated with high pH induced
    internal loading
  • Total decline was from 0.8 mg/L to 0.06 mg/L over
    36 yrs or 0.02 mg/L/yr

47
Gunston Cove StationChlorophyll a Extended
Record
  • In contrast to the TP and SRP, values of
    chlorophyll a from 1969/70 were not substantially
    higher than in the early 1980s
  • This suggests that P levels had to be drawn down
    to at least the early 1980s levels (c. 0.15
    mg/L) before nutrient limitation of phytoplankton
    could begin to be a factor
  • By 2000, TP was at about 0.10 mg/L and as it
    dropped further it began to cause a clear drop in
    chlorophyll a

48
TP response to decreased P Loading?
  • Rate of TP decline was slow during 1980s period
    of internal loading
  • Rate quickened in 1990 with apparent cessation of
    internal loading

49
Chla response to decreased TP in water column?
  • Adding in historic data shows that before P
    loading reductions, chlorophyll was not sensitive
    to P in water column
  • Presumably it was saturated with P, but by 1983,
    P and Chl were pretty closely related.
  • Even with reductions, TP had to drop below 0.2
    mg/L, then Chl started to decline proportionately

50
Gunston Cove Light Environment
  • Full restoration of Gunston Cove requires
    re-establishment of submersed macrophyte beds
  • The primary requirement for this is light
    availability throughout the water column
  • Light attenuation is due to algae, inorganic
    particles, and dissolved substances

51
Light Conditions Required for Submersed
Macrophyte Growth
  • Batiuk et al. established minimum light
    requirements for SAV growth in Chesapeake Bay
  • In tidal fresh region, 9-13 of incident light
    during SAV growing season was needed

52
Gunston Cove Station
  • Secchi disk was fairly constant from 1984 through
    1995 with the trend line at about 40 cm.
  • Since 1995 there has been a steady increase in
    the trend line from 40 cm to nearly 80 cm in
    2003.
  • Linear regression was highly significant with a
    predicted increase of 1.51 cm per year or a total
    of 33 cm over the long term study period

53
Gunston Cove Light Environment over time
  • Using the two time series of Kd, maximum depth of
    macrophyte colonization was predicted using the
    10 surface light criterion
  • Predicted maximum macrophyte depth was well below
    1 m during the 1980s and 1990s
  • But beginning in about 2000 it started to rise
    consistently and passed 1 m by 2003/04

Secchi-disk approx. Measured Kd
54
Reemergence of Submersed Macrophytes in Gunston
Cove
  • 2000 Distribution

55
Reemergence of Submersed Macrophytes in Gunston
Cove
  • 2005 Distribution

56
Summary of Phytoplankton, Light, Submersed
Macrophyte Response
  • Improvements in water clarity related to
    P-limitation and decline of phytoplankton were
    correlated with an increase in submersed
    macrophyte coverage in Gunston Cove
  • Since 1 m colonization depth was achieved (2004),
    macrophyte coverage has increased strongly

57
We have documented the partial restoration of
Gunston Cove to its pre-eutrophication conditions
including -Decrease in P loading -Decrease in TP
and phytoplankton chlorophyll -Increase in water
clarity -Reestablishment of submersed macrophyte
beds to a substantial portion of the cove
58
Acknowledgements
  • Dr. Donald Kelso
  • Fairfax County Department of Public Works
  • Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
  • Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin
  • U.S. Army Garrison Fort Belvoir
  • Piedmont Environmental Council
  • District of Columbia Government
  • Many GMU graduate and undergraduate students have
    participated in field and lab data collections
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com