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Nutrient Enrichment of Chesapeake Bay and Its Impact on the Habitat of Striped Bass: A Speculative Hypothesis
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1985
Year
Dissolved OxygenEngineeringSpeculative HypothesisZooplankton EcologyFishery ScienceChesapeake BayFreshwater EcosystemMarine EcologyMarine SystemsOceanographySummer Oxygen ConcentrationsStriped BassMarine BiologyBenthic EcologyNutrient EnrichmentOceanic Systems
Abstract Stocks of striped bass Morone saxatilis have declined in the Chesapeake Bay system over the last decade. We present evidence for the working hypothesis that the decline has resulted, in part, from loss of deep-water habitat for adults, caused by limiting concentrations of dissolved oxygen that are related, in turn, to nutrient enrichment and greater planktonic production. A related hypothesis is that changes in the near-shore habitat for juvenile striped bass, involving severe declines in submerged aquatic vegetation due to nutrient-driven planktonic shading, also have contributed to the decline of striped bass. Nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) and chlorophyll a, an indicator of phytoplankton biomass, have increased in many areas of the bay and tributaries over the past 20 to 30 years. These trends are qualitatively correlated with greater deoxygenation of the deep channel in the mid and upper bay. During the late 1970s, summer oxygen concentrations as low as 2 ml/liter approached to within 7–...