Suspended and Dissolved Matter in the Sacramento River and Delta Region Under Drought Conditions

Steven G Ackleson1, W. Joe Rhea1, Sarah Blaser2, Frances Wilkerson3, Richard C Dugdale3, Curtiss O Davis4 and Nicholas B Tufillaro5, (1)Naval Research Laboratory, Remote Sensing Division, Washington, DC, United States, (2)San Francisco State University, CA, United States, (3)San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, United States, (4)Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States, (5)Oregon State University, College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Corvallis, OR, United States
Abstract:
The State of California is experiencing the fourth year of a historic drought that, as it continues to worsen, has raised concerns about future agricultural production and prompted emergency water restrictions. The Sacramento River drainage basin and estuary fall within the drought area classified as extreme to exceptional. To document the ecological effects of this drought and to serve as baseline conditions with which to compare future non-drought conditions, a series of seasonal field campaigns were conducted between June 2014 and October 2015 to characterize the concentration, composition, and morphology of particulate and dissolved matter within the lower reaches of the Sacramento River and delta region. In situ measurements of spectral light scatter and absorption due to water impurities are compared with water sample analyses for pigment and suspended sediment concentration. In situ measurements are used to derive remote sensing algorithms for impurity concentration and composition from above-water and remotely sensed radiometric measurements. Results indicate a seasonally stable riverine water mass and particle population feeding into a delta region with complicated hydrodynamics, point sources of wetland detritus and dissolved organic matter, and heterogeneous particle assemblages. Possible changes as a result of an El Nino are discussed.