James Cloern (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 104
The annual cycles of phytoplankton biomass The annual cycles of phytoplankton biomass
Terrestrial plants are powerful climate sentinels because their annual cycles of growth, reproduction and senescence are finely tuned to the annual climate cycle having a period of one year. Consistency in the seasonal phasing of terrestrial plant activity provides a relatively low-noise background from which phenological shifts can be detected and attributed to climate change. Here, we...
Authors
Monika Winder, James Cloern
Primary production and carrying capacity of former salt ponds after reconnection to San Francisco Bay Primary production and carrying capacity of former salt ponds after reconnection to San Francisco Bay
Over 6,110 ha of the commercial production salt ponds surrounding South San Francisco Bay, CA, have been decommissioned and reconnected to the bay, most as part of the largest wetlands restoration program in the western United States. These open water ponds are critical habitat for millions of birds annually and restoration program managers must determine the appropriate balance between...
Authors
Julien Thebault, Tara Schraga, James Cloern, Eric Dunlavey
On phytoplankton trends On phytoplankton trends
Phytoplankton—unicellular algae in the surface layer of lakes and oceans—fuel the lacustrine and marine food chains and play a key role in regulating atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. How will rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the air and surface ocean in turn affect phytoplankton? Answering this question is crucial for projecting future climate change. However, because
Authors
Victor Smetacek, James Cloern
Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface
Seasonal fluctuations of plant biomass and photosynthesis are key features of the Earth system because they drive variability of atmospheric CO2, water and nutrient cycling, and food supply to consumers. There is no inventory of phytoplankton seasonal cycles in nearshore coastal ecosystems where forcings from ocean, land and atmosphere intersect. We compiled time series of phytoplankton...
Authors
J. E. Cloern, A.D. Jassby
Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta
We use selected monitoring data to illustrate how localized water diversions from seasonal barriers, gate operations, and export pumps alter water quality across the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (California). Dynamics of water-quality variability are complex because the Delta is a mixing zone of water from the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, agricultural return water, and the San...
Authors
Nancy Monsen, James Cloern, Jon Burau
Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model. Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model.
The import of resources (food, nutrients) sustains biological production and food webs in resource-limited habitats. Resource export from donor habitats subsidizes production in recipient habitats, but the ecosystem-scale consequences of resource translocation are generally unknown. Here, I use a nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model to show how dispersive connectivity between a...
Authors
James Cloern
A cold phase of the East Pacific triggers new phytoplankton blooms in San Francisco Bay A cold phase of the East Pacific triggers new phytoplankton blooms in San Francisco Bay
Ecological observations sustained over decades often reveal abrupt changes in biological communities that signal altered ecosystem states. We report a large shift in the biological communities of San Francisco Bay, first detected as increasing phytoplankton biomass and occurrences of new seasonal blooms that began in 1999. This phytoplankton increase is paradoxical because it occurred in...
Authors
James Cloern, Alan Jassby, Janet Thompson, Kathryn Hieb
Eutrophication of freshwater and marine ecosystems Eutrophication of freshwater and marine ecosystems
Initial understanding of the links between nutrients and aquatic productivity originated in Europe in the early 1900s, and our knowledge base has expanded greatly during the past 40 yr. This explosion of eutrophication-related research has made it unequivocally clear that a comprehensive strategy to prevent excessive amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus from entering our waterways is...
Authors
Val Smith, Samantha Joye, Robert Howarth
Ecological values of shallow-water habitats: Implications for the restoration of disturbed ecosystems Ecological values of shallow-water habitats: Implications for the restoration of disturbed ecosystems
A presumed value of shallow-habitat enhanced pelagic productivity derives from the principle that in nutrient-rich aquatic systems phytoplankton growth rate is controlled by light availability, which varies inversely with habitat depth. We measured a set of biological indicators across the gradient of habitat depth within the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (California) to test the...
Authors
C.B. Lopez, J. E. Cloern, T.S. Schraga, A.J. Little, L.V. Lucas, J.K. Thompson, J.R. Burau
Heat wave brings an unprecedented red tide to San Francisco Bay Heat wave brings an unprecedented red tide to San Francisco Bay
An exceptional red tide in San Francisco Bay was observed on 8 September 2004. The red tide had chlorophyll concentrations approaching 200 mg/m3 (Figure 1) in red/purple surface streaks containing high abundances of the dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea. Red tides and harmful algal blooms (HABs) are common features of coastal ecosystems, and their growing frequency is a suspected outcome...
Authors
James Cloern, Tara Schraga, Cary B. Lopez
Detritus fuels ecosystem metabolism but not metazoan food webs in San Francisco estuary's freshwater delta Detritus fuels ecosystem metabolism but not metazoan food webs in San Francisco estuary's freshwater delta
Detritus from terrestrial ecosystems is the major source of organic matter in many streams, rivers, and estuaries, yet the role of detritus in supporting pelagic food webs is debated. We examined the importance of detritus to secondary productivity in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River Delta (California, United States), a large complex of tidal freshwater habitats. The Delta ecosystem...
Authors
W. Sobczak, J. E. Cloern, A.D. Jassby, B.E. Cole, T.S. Schraga, A. Arnsberg
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 104
The annual cycles of phytoplankton biomass The annual cycles of phytoplankton biomass
Terrestrial plants are powerful climate sentinels because their annual cycles of growth, reproduction and senescence are finely tuned to the annual climate cycle having a period of one year. Consistency in the seasonal phasing of terrestrial plant activity provides a relatively low-noise background from which phenological shifts can be detected and attributed to climate change. Here, we...
Authors
Monika Winder, James Cloern
Primary production and carrying capacity of former salt ponds after reconnection to San Francisco Bay Primary production and carrying capacity of former salt ponds after reconnection to San Francisco Bay
Over 6,110 ha of the commercial production salt ponds surrounding South San Francisco Bay, CA, have been decommissioned and reconnected to the bay, most as part of the largest wetlands restoration program in the western United States. These open water ponds are critical habitat for millions of birds annually and restoration program managers must determine the appropriate balance between...
Authors
Julien Thebault, Tara Schraga, James Cloern, Eric Dunlavey
On phytoplankton trends On phytoplankton trends
Phytoplankton—unicellular algae in the surface layer of lakes and oceans—fuel the lacustrine and marine food chains and play a key role in regulating atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. How will rising carbon dioxide concentrations in the air and surface ocean in turn affect phytoplankton? Answering this question is crucial for projecting future climate change. However, because
Authors
Victor Smetacek, James Cloern
Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface
Seasonal fluctuations of plant biomass and photosynthesis are key features of the Earth system because they drive variability of atmospheric CO2, water and nutrient cycling, and food supply to consumers. There is no inventory of phytoplankton seasonal cycles in nearshore coastal ecosystems where forcings from ocean, land and atmosphere intersect. We compiled time series of phytoplankton...
Authors
J. E. Cloern, A.D. Jassby
Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta
We use selected monitoring data to illustrate how localized water diversions from seasonal barriers, gate operations, and export pumps alter water quality across the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (California). Dynamics of water-quality variability are complex because the Delta is a mixing zone of water from the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, agricultural return water, and the San...
Authors
Nancy Monsen, James Cloern, Jon Burau
Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model. Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model.
The import of resources (food, nutrients) sustains biological production and food webs in resource-limited habitats. Resource export from donor habitats subsidizes production in recipient habitats, but the ecosystem-scale consequences of resource translocation are generally unknown. Here, I use a nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model to show how dispersive connectivity between a...
Authors
James Cloern
A cold phase of the East Pacific triggers new phytoplankton blooms in San Francisco Bay A cold phase of the East Pacific triggers new phytoplankton blooms in San Francisco Bay
Ecological observations sustained over decades often reveal abrupt changes in biological communities that signal altered ecosystem states. We report a large shift in the biological communities of San Francisco Bay, first detected as increasing phytoplankton biomass and occurrences of new seasonal blooms that began in 1999. This phytoplankton increase is paradoxical because it occurred in...
Authors
James Cloern, Alan Jassby, Janet Thompson, Kathryn Hieb
Eutrophication of freshwater and marine ecosystems Eutrophication of freshwater and marine ecosystems
Initial understanding of the links between nutrients and aquatic productivity originated in Europe in the early 1900s, and our knowledge base has expanded greatly during the past 40 yr. This explosion of eutrophication-related research has made it unequivocally clear that a comprehensive strategy to prevent excessive amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus from entering our waterways is...
Authors
Val Smith, Samantha Joye, Robert Howarth
Ecological values of shallow-water habitats: Implications for the restoration of disturbed ecosystems Ecological values of shallow-water habitats: Implications for the restoration of disturbed ecosystems
A presumed value of shallow-habitat enhanced pelagic productivity derives from the principle that in nutrient-rich aquatic systems phytoplankton growth rate is controlled by light availability, which varies inversely with habitat depth. We measured a set of biological indicators across the gradient of habitat depth within the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta (California) to test the...
Authors
C.B. Lopez, J. E. Cloern, T.S. Schraga, A.J. Little, L.V. Lucas, J.K. Thompson, J.R. Burau
Heat wave brings an unprecedented red tide to San Francisco Bay Heat wave brings an unprecedented red tide to San Francisco Bay
An exceptional red tide in San Francisco Bay was observed on 8 September 2004. The red tide had chlorophyll concentrations approaching 200 mg/m3 (Figure 1) in red/purple surface streaks containing high abundances of the dinoflagellate Akashiwo sanguinea. Red tides and harmful algal blooms (HABs) are common features of coastal ecosystems, and their growing frequency is a suspected outcome...
Authors
James Cloern, Tara Schraga, Cary B. Lopez
Detritus fuels ecosystem metabolism but not metazoan food webs in San Francisco estuary's freshwater delta Detritus fuels ecosystem metabolism but not metazoan food webs in San Francisco estuary's freshwater delta
Detritus from terrestrial ecosystems is the major source of organic matter in many streams, rivers, and estuaries, yet the role of detritus in supporting pelagic food webs is debated. We examined the importance of detritus to secondary productivity in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River Delta (California, United States), a large complex of tidal freshwater habitats. The Delta ecosystem...
Authors
W. Sobczak, J. E. Cloern, A.D. Jassby, B.E. Cole, T.S. Schraga, A. Arnsberg