Chesapeake bay submerged aquatic vegetation habitat requirements and restoration targets: A technical synthesis
Chesapeake Bay, one of the world's largest estuaries, has experienced deterioration of water quality from nutrient enrichment, resulting in anoxic or hypoxic conditions and declines in living resources. Determination of relationships between water quality and various living resources provides a mechanism of relating anthropogenic inputs to the 'health' of Chesapeake Bay. One of the major factors contributing to the high productivity of Chesapeake Bay has been the historical abundance of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV). SAV in Chesapeake Bay include some twenty freshwater and marine species of rooted, flowering plants. SAV provide food for waterfowl and are critical habitat for shellfish and finfish. SAV also affect nutrient cycling, sediment stability, and water turbidity. The primary objective of the SAV Technical Synthesis is to establish the quantitative levels of relevant water quality parameters necessary to support continued survival, propagation, and restoration of SAV.
- Research Organization:
- Virginia Inst. of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, VA (United States)
- OSTI ID:
- 6084380
- Report Number(s):
- PB-93-196665/XAB; CNN: EPA-68-WO-0043
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Trends in the distribution, abundance, and habitat quality of submerged aquatic vegetation in Chesapeake Bay and its tidal tributaries: 1971 to 1991
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Related Subjects
540350* -- Environment
Aquatic-- Site Resource & Use Studies-- (1990-)
ABUNDANCE
ANIMALS
ANOXIA
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
AQUATIC ORGANISMS
ATLANTIC OCEAN
BAYS
BIOLOGICAL RECOVERY
CHEMICAL PREPARATION
CHESAPEAKE BAY
COASTAL WATERS
CONTROL
DEPTH
DIAGRAMS
DIMENSIONS
ECOSYSTEMS
ENRICHMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
ESTUARIES
FISHES
FOOD
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
GROWTH
HABITAT
LEVELS
NUTRIENTS
PLANT GROWTH
POLLUTION CONTROL
PRODUCTIVITY
QUANTIZATION
REGULATIONS
REMEDIAL ACTION
SEAS
SEDIMENTS
SOLIDS
STABILITY
SURFACE WATERS
SYNTHESIS
TURBIDITY
UNDERWATER
VERTEBRATES
WATER POLLUTION CONTROL
WATER QUALITY