Abstract

Changes in water clarity across the shallow continental shelf of the central Great Barrier Reef were investigated from ten years of daily river load, oceanographic and MODIS-Aqua data. Mean photic depth (i.e., the depth of 10% of surface irradiance) was related to river loads after statistical removal of wave and tidal effects. Across the ∼25,000 km2 area, photic depth was strongly related to river freshwater and phosphorus loads (R2=0.65 and 0.51, respectively). In the six wetter years, photic depth was reduced by 19.8% and below water quality guidelines for 156days, compared to 9days in the drier years. After onset of the seasonal river floods, photic depth was reduced for on average 6–8months, gradually returning to clearer baseline values. Relationships were strongest inshore and midshelf (∼12–80km from the coast), and weaker near the chronically turbid coast. The data show that reductions in river loads would measurably improve shelf water clarity, with significant ecosystem health benefits.

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