Wetland availability and salinity concentrations for breeding waterfowl in Suisun Marsh, California
Availability of wetlands with low salinities during the breeding season can influence waterfowl reproductive success and population recruitment. Salinities as low as 2 ppt (3.6 mScm–1) can impair duckling growth and influence behavior, with mortality occurring above 9 ppt (14.8 mScm–1). We used satellite imagery to quantify the amount of available water, and sampled surface water salinity at Grizzly Island, in the brackish Suisun Marsh, at three time-periods during waterfowl breeding (April, May, July) over 4 years (2016–2019). More water was available and salinity was lower during wetter years (2017, 2019) than during drier years (2016, 2018), and the amount of water in wetlands decreased 73%–86% from April to July. Across all time-periods and years, the majority (64%–100%) of wetland habitat area had salinities above what has been shown to negatively affect ducklings (> 2 ppt), and up to 42% of wetland area had salinities associated with duckling mortality (> 9 ppt). During peak duckling production in May, 81%–95% of available water had salinity above 2 ppt, and 5%–21% was above 9 ppt. In May of the driest year (2016), only 0.5 km2 of low-salinity water (
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2021 |
|---|---|
| Title | Wetland availability and salinity concentrations for breeding waterfowl in Suisun Marsh, California |
| DOI | 10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss3art5 |
| Authors | Carley Schacter, Sarah Peterson, Mark Herzog, C. Hartman, Michael Casazza, Josh Ackerman |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science |
| Index ID | 70224578 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Western Ecological Research Center |