NOAA Fisheries, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Point Adams Research Station, Hammond, Oregon, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Apr 20;6(4):e18672. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018672.
Low dissolved oxygen (DO) is a common feature of many estuarine and shallow-water environments, and is often attributed to anthropogenic nutrient enrichment from terrestrial-fluvial pathways. However, recent events in the U.S. Pacific Northwest have highlighted that wind-forced upwelling can cause naturally occurring low DO water to move onto the continental shelf, leading to mortalities of benthic fish and invertebrates. Coastal estuaries in the Pacific Northwest are strongly linked to ocean forcings, and here we report observations on the spatial and temporal patterns of oxygen concentration in the Columbia River estuary. Hydrographic measurements were made from transect (spatial survey) or anchor station (temporal survey) deployments over a variety of wind stresses and tidal states during the upwelling seasons of 2006 through 2008. During this period, biologically stressful levels of dissolved oxygen were observed to enter the Columbia River estuary from oceanic sources, with minimum values close to the hypoxic threshold of 2.0 mg L(-1). Riverine water was consistently normoxic. Upwelling wind stress controlled the timing and magnitude of low DO events, while tidal-modulated estuarine circulation patterns influenced the spatial extent and duration of exposure to low DO water. Strong upwelling during neap tides produced the largest impact on the estuary. The observed oxygen concentrations likely had deleterious behavioral and physiological consequences for migrating juvenile salmon and benthic crabs. Based on a wind-forced supply mechanism, low DO events are probably common to the Columbia River and other regional estuaries and if conditions on the shelf deteriorate further, as observations and models predict, Pacific Northwest estuarine habitats could experience a decrease in environmental quality.
溶解氧(DO)水平低是许多河口和浅海环境的常见特征,通常归因于陆地-河流途径的人为营养物富化。然而,美国太平洋西北地区最近发生的事件突显了风强迫上升流会导致自然发生的低 DO 水移动到大陆架上,导致底栖鱼类和无脊椎动物死亡。太平洋西北地区的沿海河口与海洋强迫密切相关,在这里我们报告了哥伦比亚河口氧浓度的时空格局的观测结果。在上升流季节(2006 年至 2008 年),在各种风应力和潮汐状态下,通过横剖面(空间调查)或锚定站(时间调查)部署进行了水文学测量。在此期间,观察到从海洋来源进入哥伦比亚河口的具有生物胁迫性的溶解氧水平,最低值接近 2.0 mg L(-1) 的缺氧阈值。河流水始终处于正常氧合状态。上升流风应力控制了低 DO 事件的时间和幅度,而潮汐调制的河口环流模式影响了低 DO 水暴露的空间范围和持续时间。小潮期间的强上升流对河口的影响最大。观察到的氧气浓度可能对洄游性幼鲑鱼和底栖蟹类产生有害的行为和生理后果。基于风强迫供应机制,低 DO 事件可能在哥伦比亚河和其他地区的河口中很常见,如果如观测和模型预测的那样,架上条件进一步恶化,太平洋西北地区的河口生境可能会经历环境质量下降。