Abstract

Statistical modeling of water-quality data collected at the Sacramento River at Freeport and San Joaquin River near Vernalis, California, USA, was used to examine trends in concentrations and loads of various forms of dissolved and particulate nitrogen and phosphorus that entered the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (Delta) from upstream sources between 1970 and 2019. Ammonium concentrations and loads decreased at the Sacramento River site from the mid-1970s through 1990 because of the consolidation of wastewater treatment and continuously reduced from the mid-1970s to 2019 at the San Joaquin River site. Current ammonium concentrations are mostly below 4 µM (0.056 mg N L–1) at both sites, a concentration above which reductions in phytoplankton productivity or changes in algal species composition may occur. The Sacramento River at Freeport site is located upstream of the Sacramento Regional County Sanitation District’s treatment facility’s discharge point; nutrient water quality there is representative of upstream sources. Inorganic nitrogen (nitrate plus ammonium) concentrations and loading differed at both sites. At the Sacramento River location, concentrations decrease in the summer agricultural season, reducing the molar ratios of nitrogen to phosphorus. In contrast, inorganic nitrogen concentrations increase in the San Joaquin River during the agricultural season as a result of irrigation runoff, increasing the molar ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus. This increase suggests a possible nitrogen limitation in the northern Delta and a phosphorus limitation in the southern Delta, as indicated by the molar ratios of bioavailable nitrogen to bioavailable phosphorus. Planned upgrades to the Sacramento Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant (SRWTP) will reduce inorganic nitrogen inputs to the northern Delta. Consequently, the supply of bioavailable nitrogen throughout the upper estuary should diminish. Source modeling of nitrogen and phosphorus identifies agriculture, atmospheric deposition, and wastewater effluent as sources of total nitrogen in the Central Valley. In contrast, geologic sources, agriculture, and wastewater discharge are the primary sources of phosphorus.

Highlights

  • The Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (Delta) is part of the largest estuary on the west coast of North America, covering an area of about 2,984 km2

  • The Delta receives most of its freshwater from the combined flows of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, which collectively drain about 100,000 km2 of land with a diverse land cover

  • Our analysis focuses on the upstream sources of nutrient concentrations and load trends where the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers enter the Delta

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Summary

Introduction

The Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (Delta) is part of the largest estuary on the west coast of North America, covering an area of about 2,984 km. The Delta is an essential source of water for both urban and agricultural users by way of pumps in the southern portion (Templin and Cherry 1997; https://water.ca.gov/Programs/ State-Water-Project/Management/Water-Transfers). About 2,024 km of the Delta is agricultural land and home to many bird, mammal, and fish species. The Delta receives most of its freshwater from the combined flows of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, which collectively drain about 100,000 km of land with a diverse land cover. The hydrology of the Delta under natural conditions has been described by Fox et al (2015)

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