Water quality and phytoplankton dynamics in Moreton Bay, south-eastern Queensland. I. Field survey and satellite data
James McEwan,
Albert J. Gabric and Peter R. F. Bell
Marine and Freshwater Research
49(3) 215 - 225
Published: 1998
Abstract
The water quality of Moreton Bay, a sub-tropical estuarine embayment in south-eastern Queensland, was monitored over a 2-year period. Surveys in situ and ground-truthed satellite imagery were used to describe the temporal and spatial variability in water-quality indicators and the level of eutrophication. Strong east–west gradients in chlorophyll α and water clarity were found. During the study period fluvial discharges, which all enter on the western littoral, were below their long-term averages, and nutrient loading to the bay was dominated by point-source wastewater discharges along the western boundary. The data suggest that although the impact of nutrient loads on the bay’s eastern side is mitigated by tidal intrusion of oceanic water, the western areas are already degraded and can be considered mesotrophic to eutrophic. This part of the bay may deteriorate further with the projected future population expansion in the bay’s catchment.https://doi.org/10.1071/MF95096
© CSIRO 1998