4.6 Article

Ecosystem responses to long-term nutrient management in an urban estuary: Tampa Bay, Florida, USA

Journal

ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
Volume 151, Issue -, Pages A1-A16

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2014.10.003

Keywords

ecosystem recovery; eutrophication; watershed management; seagrass; USA; Florida; Tampa Bay

Funding

  1. Tampa Bay Estuary Program partners
  2. US Environmental Protection Agency
  3. Southwest Florida Water Management District
  4. county of Hillsborough
  5. county of Manatee
  6. county of Pinellas
  7. city of Clearwater
  8. city of St. Petersburg
  9. city of Tampa
  10. Tampa Bay Water

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In subtropical Tampa Bay, Florida, USA, we evaluated restoration trajectories before and after nutrient management strategies were implemented using long-term trends in nutrient loading, water quality, primary production, and seagrass extent. Following citizen demands for action, reduction in wastewater nutrient loading of approximately 90% in the late 1970s lowered external total nitrogen (TN) loading by more than 50% within three years. Continuing nutrient management actions from public and private sectors were associated with a steadily declining TN load rate and with concomitant reduction in chlorophyll-a concentrations and ambient nutrient concentrations since the mid-1980s, despite an increase of more than 1 M people living within the Tampa Bay metropolitan area. Water quality (chlorophyll-a concentration, water clarity as indicated by Secchi disk depth, total nitrogen concentration and dissolved oxygen) and seagrass coverage are approaching conditions observed in the 1950s, before the large increases in human population in the watershed. Following recovery from an extreme weather event in 1997-1998, water clarity increased significantly and seagrass is expanding at a rate significantly different than before the event, suggesting a feedback mechanism as observed in other systems. Key elements supporting the nutrient management strategy and concomitant ecosystem recovery in Tampa Bay include: 1) active community involvement, including agreement about quantifiable restoration goals; 2) regulatory and voluntary reduction in nutrient loadings from point, atmospheric, and nonpoint sources; 3) long-term water quality and seagrass extent monitoring; and 4) a commitment from public and private sectors to work together to attain restoration goals. A shift from a turbid, phytoplanlcton-based system to a clear water, seagrass-based system that began in the 1980s following comprehensive nutrient loading reductions has resulted in a present-day Tampa Bay which looks and functions much like it did in the relatively pre-disturbance 1950s period. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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