Catalog Item
S&T Project 19007 Final Report: Calcium and pH Dynamics: Potential Influence on Invasive Mussel Establishment Risk in Lentic Waterbodies
Under an Interagency Agreement, the USGS created a risk mapping web application for dreissenid mussels in the Columbia River Basin. Additional analysis was conducted investigating the usefulness of using mean calcium and pH measurements from the Water Quality Portal for estimating establishment risk. Lentic waterbodies are the most likely initial establishment sites. Local lotic data is not a good predicter of lentic risk. Calcium is a more stable and reliable variable that should be used when available. Lentic pH data can be highly variable with daily mean values in all three risk categories for many individual sites. A single mean pH below 7.3 of a full lentic profile can be used as an indicator of calcium levels in the moderate or low risk category when calcium data is not available. If the application is expanded to other geographic areas, an analysis of local pH dynamics should be conducted prior to using it as a risk factor. Overall, this application should be used as a high-level screening tool. A deeper dive into the data should be done before making management decisions based on the risk categories displayed in the application.
Catalog Record Title
Report from S&T Project 19007: Calcium and pH Dynamics: Potential Influence on Invasive Mussel Establishment Risk in Lentic Waterbodies
Generation Effort
S&T Project 19007: Calcium and pH Dynamics: Potential Influence on Invasive Mussel Establishment Risk in Lentic Waterbodies
Location Name
Columbia River Basin
Type
Uploaded file(s)
File Type
PDF
Publisher
Bureau of Reclamation
Publication Date
Monday, July 18th, 2022
Update Frequency
not planned
Last Update
Thursday, September 15th, 2022
Disclaimer
The findings and conclusions of this work are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the Bureau of Reclamation.

