Bivalve Effects on the Food Web Supporting Delta Smelt—A Spatially Intensive Study of Bivalve Recruitment, Biomass, and Grazing Rate Patterns with Varying Freshwater Outflow in 2019

Open-File Report 2022-1102
Prepared in cooperation with California Department of Water Resources
By: , and 

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  • Document: Report (7 MB pdf)
  • Related Work: Open-File Report 2022-1101 - Bivalve Effects on the Food Web Supporting Delta Smelt—A One-Year Study of Bivalve Recruitment, Biomass, and Grazing Rate Patterns with Varying Freshwater Outflow
  • Data Release: Data Release - A spatially and temporally intensive sampling study of benthic community and bivalve metrics in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (ver. 2.0, May 2021)
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Abstract

Phytoplankton are an important and limiting food source in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and San Francisco Bay. The decline of phytoplankton biomass is one potential factor in the decline of the protected Hypomesus transpacificus (delta smelt) and other pelagic organisms. The bivalves Corbicula fluminea and Potamocorbula amurensis (hereafter C. fluminea and P. amurensis, respectively) have been shown to control phytoplankton biomass in several locations throughout the San Francisco Bay and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta; therefore, knowledge of their distribution and population dynamics are of great interest.

Here, we describe the distribution and dynamics of bivalve biomass using samples collected by the California Department of Water Resources (DWR) as part of the benthic monitoring program in 2019. One element of DWR’s and the Bureau of Reclamation’s Environmental Monitoring Program—the Generalized Random Tessellation Stratified (GRTS) program—examines the spatial and temporal extent of C. fluminea and P. amurensis control on phytoplankton. Historically, the GRTS program sampled 175 benthic stations (50 stations that are monitored every year and 125 randomly selected new stations that are changed yearly) throughout the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and northern San Francisco Bay (San Pablo and Suisun Bays) during one week in May and October. In 2019, only the 50 annually replicated stations were sampled.

Corbicula fluminea and P. amurensis biomass and grazing rates had similar trends; therefore, the conclusions regarding biomass are applied to grazing rate data as well. Corbicula fluminea biomass decreased from May to October, whereas P. amurensis average biomass (reported increased from May (1 g ash-free-dry-tissue mass/square meter (g AFDM/m2) to October (2 g AFDM/m2). Although C. fluminea’s average biomass was lower in October (10 gAFDM/m2) than in May (20 gAFDM/m2), the highest single biomass value was also observed in October (300 gAFDM/m2). In both May and October, most stations that recorded high C. fluminea biomass values were located in the deep water (≥3 m of depth between the surface of the water and the surface of the substrate on the bottom) and were sampled in either rivers or sloughs. A relation between depth and biomass was not observed for P. amurensis.

Both C. fluminea and P. amurensis recruitment (recruits are considered animals ≤2.5mm in length in this study and recruitment is the process of recruits successfully settled to the bottom) increased from May to October. The total number of C. fluminea recruits more than doubled from May to October, whereas P. amurensis total recruitment increased by 8-fold during the same period. Most P. amurensis recruits in May can be attributed to one station, whereas the recruits in October were found at 14 stations. A relation between number of recruits and station depth was not evident for either C. fluminea or P. amurensis.

Suggested Citation

Zierdt Smith, E.L., Shrader, K.H., Thompson, J.K., Parchaso, F., Gehrts, K., and Wells, E., 2023, Bivalve effects on the food web supporting delta smelt—A spatially intensive study of bivalve recruitment, biomass, and grazing rate patterns with varying freshwater outflow in 2019: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2022–1102, 15 p., http://doi.org/10.3133/ofr20221102.

ISSN: 2331-1258 (online)

Study Area

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Methods
  • Analytical Methods
  • Results
  • Conclusions
  • References Cited
Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Bivalve effects on the food web supporting delta smelt—A spatially intensive study of bivalve recruitment, biomass, and grazing rate patterns with varying freshwater outflow in 2019
Series title Open-File Report
Series number 2022-1102
DOI 10.3133/ofr20221102
Year Published 2023
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Publisher location Reston, VA
Contributing office(s) WMA - Earth System Processes Division
Description Report: vi, 15 p.; Data Release
Country United States
State California
Online Only (Y/N) Y
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details