Integrated Trends Analysis Team Publications
Progress toward the Restoration of Chesapeake Bay in Time and Space
Publication date: Not listedThree decades of monitoring in Chesapeake Bay and tributary rivers has allowed for an examination of the spatial and temporal patterns of water quality change in response to watershed restoration activities. This review of past monitoring data has revealed clear signs of successful water quality remediation in some Chesapeake regions. Upgrades to waste water treatment plants (WWTP) have led to measurable reductions in nutrient concentrations and algal biomass, with associated recoveries of submerged aquatic vegetation and reductions in sediment and nutrient levels. Point-source related improvements were observed in waters local to the WWTP facility, which are generally in oligohaline and tidal freshwater regions of tributaries. Reductions in atmospheric deposition of nitrogen within the Bay watershed has resulted inmarked reductions in nitrogen inputs from the Susquehanna and Potomac Rivers, and these reductions in watershed input have resulted in lower concentrations within the estuary. Coastal plain watersheds with high agricultural intensity continue to yield high amounts of nutrients, and water quality has not improved in the receiving waters of many of these tributaries. Signs of eutrophication remediation are clearest where nutrient load reductions are large and local. In more seaward estuarine reaches, recovery from eutrophication appears to be season- and regionspecific, where the late growing season period in high-salinity waters, which is most vulnerable to nutrient limitation and oxygen replenishment, appear to have recovered first. These findings suggest a refinement of our existing conceptual models of the eutrophication process in Chesapeake Bay, where time of year and proximity to nutrient sources are important to understanding spatial and temporal variation in recovery.
View document [PDF, 4.0 MB] Progress toward the Restoration of Chesapeake Bay in Time and Space
Progress toward the Restoration of Chesapeake Bay in Time and Space - Executive Summary
Publication date: Not listedThree decades of monitoring in Chesapeake Bay and tributary rivers has allowed for an examination of the spatial and temporal patterns of water quality change in response to watershed restoration activities. This review of past monitoring data has revealed clear signs of successful water quality remediation in some Chesapeake regions. Upgrades to waste water treatment plants (WWTP) have led to measurable reductions in nutrient concentrations and algal biomass, with associated recoveries of submerged aquatic vegetation and reductions in sediment and nutrient levels. Point-source related improvements were observed in waters local to the WWTP facility, which are generally in oligohaline and tidal freshwater regions of tributaries. Reductions in atmospheric deposition of nitrogen within the Bay watershed has resulted inmarked reductions in nitrogen inputs from the Susquehanna and Potomac Rivers, and these reductions in watershed input have resulted in lower concentrations within the estuary. Coastal plain watersheds with high agricultural intensity continue to yield high amounts of nutrients, and water quality has not improved in the receiving waters of many of these tributaries. Signs of eutrophication remediation are clearest where nutrient load reductions are large and local. In more seaward estuarine reaches, recovery from eutrophication appears to be season- and regionspecific, where the late growing season period in high-salinity waters, which is most vulnerable to nutrient limitation and oxygen replenishment, appear to have recovered first. These findings suggest a refinement of our existing conceptual models of the eutrophication process in Chesapeake Bay, where time of year and proximity to nutrient sources are important to understanding spatial and temporal variation in recovery.
Regional patterns and drivers of total nitrogen trends in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
Publication date:Link to the document.
Major point and nonpoint sources of nutrient pollution to surface water have declined throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed
Publication date:Link to the document.
Nutrient Improvements in Chesapeake Bay: Direct Effect of Load Reductions and Implications for Coastal Management
Publication date:Link to the document.
Long‐term trends in Chesapeake Bay remote sensing reflectance: implications for water clarity.
Publication date:Link to the document.
Effects of reduced shoreline erosion on Chesapeake Bay water clarity.
Publication date:Link to the document.
View document [PDF, 4.9 MB] Effects of reduced shoreline erosion on Chesapeake Bay water clarity.
An approach for decomposing river water-quality trends into different flow classes.
Publication date:Link to the document.
Nutrient limitation of phytoplankton in Chesapeake Bay: Development of an empirical approach for water-quality management
Publication date:Link to the document.
Patterns and trends in Secchi disk depth over three decades in the Chesapeake Bay estuarine complex
Publication date:Link to the document.
A Generalized Additive Model approach to evaluating water quality: Chesapeake Bay case study.
Publication date:Link to the final manuscript, or contact rmurphy@chesapeakebay.net for the final version.
Chesapeake Bay dissolved oxygen criterion attainment deficit: Three decades of temporal and spatial
Publication date:Link to the document.
Chesapeake Bay's water quality condition has been recovering: Insights from a multimetric indicator assessment of thirty years of tidal monitoring data
Publication date:Link to the document.
Numerical and qualitative contrasts of two statistical models for water quality change in tidal waters
Publication date:Beck, Marcus W, and Rebecca R Murphy. “Numerical and qualitative contrasts of two statistical models for water quality change in tidal waters.” Journal of the American Water Resources Association vol. 53,1 (2017): 197-219.