Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994

The California Department of Fish and Game's Natural Stocks Assessment Project (NSAP) collected water quality data at high tides on a monthly basis from February 1991 to October 1994, and during low tides from March 1992 to June 1994 in the Klamath River estuary to describe water quality conditions. NSAP collected data on water temperature, dissolved oxygen, salinity, depth of saltwedge, and Klamath River flow. Klamath River flows ranged from 44.5 cubic meters per second (1570 cfs) in August 1994 to 3832.2 cubic meters per second (135,315 cfs) in March 1993. Saltwater was present in the estuary primarily in the summer and early fall and generally extended 2 to 3 miles upstream. Surface water temperatures ranged from 6-8° C in the winter to 20-24° C in the summer. Summer water temperatures within the saltwedge were generally 5 to 8° C cooler than the surface water temperature. Dissolved oxygen in the estuary was generally greater than 6 to 7 ppm year-round. A sand berm formed at the mouth of the river each year in the late summer or early fall which raised the water level in the estuary and reduced tidal fluctuation so that the Klamath estuary became essentially a lagoon. I hypothesize the formation of the sand berm may increase the production of the estuary and help provide favorable conditions for rearing juvenile chinook salmon.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wallace, Michael
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: California Department of Fish and Game 1998
Subjects:Chemistry, Fisheries, Limnology, juvenile chinook salmon, water quality, estuary, lagoon, Klamath River, nursery habitat, brackish water,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20679
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-aquadocs-1834-20679
record_format koha
spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-206792021-06-29T02:50:43Z Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994 Inland Fisheries Administrative Report No. 98-9 Wallace, Michael Chemistry Fisheries Limnology juvenile chinook salmon water quality estuary lagoon Klamath River nursery habitat brackish water The California Department of Fish and Game's Natural Stocks Assessment Project (NSAP) collected water quality data at high tides on a monthly basis from February 1991 to October 1994, and during low tides from March 1992 to June 1994 in the Klamath River estuary to describe water quality conditions. NSAP collected data on water temperature, dissolved oxygen, salinity, depth of saltwedge, and Klamath River flow. Klamath River flows ranged from 44.5 cubic meters per second (1570 cfs) in August 1994 to 3832.2 cubic meters per second (135,315 cfs) in March 1993. Saltwater was present in the estuary primarily in the summer and early fall and generally extended 2 to 3 miles upstream. Surface water temperatures ranged from 6-8° C in the winter to 20-24° C in the summer. Summer water temperatures within the saltwedge were generally 5 to 8° C cooler than the surface water temperature. Dissolved oxygen in the estuary was generally greater than 6 to 7 ppm year-round. A sand berm formed at the mouth of the river each year in the late summer or early fall which raised the water level in the estuary and reduced tidal fluctuation so that the Klamath estuary became essentially a lagoon. I hypothesize the formation of the sand berm may increase the production of the estuary and help provide favorable conditions for rearing juvenile chinook salmon. Natural Stocks Assessment Project 2021-06-24T15:46:10Z 2021-06-24T15:46:10Z 1998 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20679 en Inland Fisheries Division Administrative Report application/pdf application/pdf 35 California Department of Fish and Game Sacramento, CA http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2908 8 2014-10-30 18:52:00 2908 California Department of Fish and Game
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Chemistry
Fisheries
Limnology
juvenile chinook salmon
water quality
estuary
lagoon
Klamath River
nursery habitat
brackish water
Chemistry
Fisheries
Limnology
juvenile chinook salmon
water quality
estuary
lagoon
Klamath River
nursery habitat
brackish water
spellingShingle Chemistry
Fisheries
Limnology
juvenile chinook salmon
water quality
estuary
lagoon
Klamath River
nursery habitat
brackish water
Chemistry
Fisheries
Limnology
juvenile chinook salmon
water quality
estuary
lagoon
Klamath River
nursery habitat
brackish water
Wallace, Michael
Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
description The California Department of Fish and Game's Natural Stocks Assessment Project (NSAP) collected water quality data at high tides on a monthly basis from February 1991 to October 1994, and during low tides from March 1992 to June 1994 in the Klamath River estuary to describe water quality conditions. NSAP collected data on water temperature, dissolved oxygen, salinity, depth of saltwedge, and Klamath River flow. Klamath River flows ranged from 44.5 cubic meters per second (1570 cfs) in August 1994 to 3832.2 cubic meters per second (135,315 cfs) in March 1993. Saltwater was present in the estuary primarily in the summer and early fall and generally extended 2 to 3 miles upstream. Surface water temperatures ranged from 6-8° C in the winter to 20-24° C in the summer. Summer water temperatures within the saltwedge were generally 5 to 8° C cooler than the surface water temperature. Dissolved oxygen in the estuary was generally greater than 6 to 7 ppm year-round. A sand berm formed at the mouth of the river each year in the late summer or early fall which raised the water level in the estuary and reduced tidal fluctuation so that the Klamath estuary became essentially a lagoon. I hypothesize the formation of the sand berm may increase the production of the estuary and help provide favorable conditions for rearing juvenile chinook salmon.
format monograph
topic_facet Chemistry
Fisheries
Limnology
juvenile chinook salmon
water quality
estuary
lagoon
Klamath River
nursery habitat
brackish water
author Wallace, Michael
author_facet Wallace, Michael
author_sort Wallace, Michael
title Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
title_short Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
title_full Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
title_fullStr Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal water quality monitoring in the Klamath River estuary, 1991-1994
title_sort seasonal water quality monitoring in the klamath river estuary, 1991-1994
publisher California Department of Fish and Game
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/20679
work_keys_str_mv AT wallacemichael seasonalwaterqualitymonitoringintheklamathriverestuary19911994
AT wallacemichael inlandfisheriesadministrativereportno989
_version_ 1756077396152287232