DocumentCode :
1915911
Title :
Seasonal sediment load, light attenuation and eel grass coverage in San Diego Bay
Author :
Richter, Ken ; Perdue, Mitchell ; Patterson, Andrew
Author_Institution :
Technical Eval. Div., Naval Ocean Syst. Center, San Diego, CA, USA
Volume :
3
fYear :
1995
fDate :
9-12 Oct 1995
Firstpage :
1745
Abstract :
Eel grass (Zostera marina) beds in San Diego Bay are a protected habitat and artificial planting of beds is often accepted as mitigation for environmental disruption. The beds reduce sediment erosion, serve as a nursery for young fish and benthic organisms, and hence attract larger foragers. Which environmental parameters control the growth and distribution of eel grass, and under what conditions, is still uncertain. Though submarine light levels are felt to be the dominant control, individuals of a given species may have different light requirements when growing in different habitats of the same estuary and may require more light as variability in the available light increases. Extensive, independent surveys of water quality parameters (such as transmissivity, chlorophyll, total suspended solids and temperature) collected by NRaD, and surveys of bottom depth and eel grass coverage conducted by Southwest Division were combined to examine light attenuation as a determinant in eel grass success
Keywords :
aquaculture; botany; ecology; light absorption; oceanographic regions; sedimentation; turbidity; California; North Pacific; San Diego Bay; USA; United States; Zostera marina; absorption; ecology; eel grass beds; eel grass coverage; growth; intertidal zone; light attenuation; light requirement; marine geology; marine vegetation; ocean; optics; protected habitat; sea coast; season; seasonal sediment load; sedimentation; turbidity; underwater light attenuation; water quality; Marine animals; Oceans; Optical attenuators; Organisms; Protection; Sediments; Solids; Storage area networks; Surveillance; Underwater vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS '95. MTS/IEEE. Challenges of Our Changing Global Environment. Conference Proceedings.
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-933957-14-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.1995.528847
Filename :
528847
Link To Document :
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