The pattern and influence of low dissolved oxygen in the Patuxent River, a seasonally hypoxic estuary
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JH Cowan, DL Breitburg, A Adamack, SE Kolesar, MB Decker, JE Purcell, JE Keister
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1007/bf02695967
Sponsors:
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Increased nutrient loadings have resulted in low dissolved oxygen (DO)
concentrations in bottom waters of the Patuxent River, a tributary of
Chesapeake Bay. We synthesize existing and newly collected data to
examine spatial and temporal variation in bottom DO, the prevalence of
hypoxia-induced mortality of fishes, the tolerance of Patuxent River
biota to low DO, and the influence of bottom DO on the vertical
distributions and spatial overlap of larval fish and fish eggs with
their gelatinous predators and zooplankton prey. We use this
information, as well as output from watershed-quality and water-quality
models, to configure a spatially-explicit individual-based model to
predict how changing land use within the Patuxent watershed may affect
survival of early life stages of summer breeding fishes through its
effect on DO. Bottom waters in much of the mesohaline Patuxent River are
below 50\% DO saturation during summer. The system is characterized by
high spatial and temporal variation in DO concentrations, and the
current severity and extent of hypoxia are sufficient to alter
distributions of organisms and trophic interactions in the river.
Gelatinous zooplankton are among the most tolerant species of hypoxia, while several of the ecologically and economically important finfish are
among the most sensitive. This variation in DO tolerances may make the
Patuxent River, and similar estuaries, particularly susceptible to
hypoxia-induced alterations in food web dynamics. Model simulations
consistently predict high mortality of planktonic bay anchovy eggs
(Anchoa mitchilli) under current DO, and increasing survival of fish
eggs with increasing DO. Changes in land use that reduce nutrient
loadings may either increase or decrease predation mortality of larval
fish depending on the baseline DO conditions at any point in space and
time. A precautionary approach towards fisheries and ecosystem
management would recommend reducing nutrients to levels at which low
oxygen effects on estuarine habitat are reduced and, where possible, eliminated.
Tags
behavior
Temperature
Marine
Fish larvae
Chesapeake bay
Stratified water column
Predation
mortality
Benthic fauna
Ctenophores
Crustaceans