Temperature and DO
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Temperature and DO. Temperature A measure of heat Dissolved Oxygen (DO) The concentration of oxygen (gas) which is dissolved in water. Both are important individually and to one another. Why is Temperature Important?.
Temperature and DO
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Temperature and DO Temperature • A measure of heat Dissolved Oxygen (DO) • The concentration of oxygen (gas) which is dissolved in water. Both are important individually and to one another
Why is Temperature Important? • Most aquatic organisms are poikilothermic (“cold-blooded”), which means they don’t internally regulate their core body temperature. • The rate of many chemical reactions increases at higher temperatures. • Oxygen solubility
Temperature - Units • Fahrenheit (°F), Celsius (°C), Kelvin (K) • Celsius (°C) used for most science (SI unit) • a.k.a. centigrade, where “centi-” = hundredth • Water Freezes at 0°C = 32°F = 273.15 K • Water Boils at 100°C = 212°F = 373.15 K 0°C 100°C 32°F 212°F
Temperature - Units • Conversion Factors (°F – 32) 1.8 °F = (°C x 1.8) + 32 °C =
Temperature – Q10 Rule • General rule which predicts: Growth rates of cold-blooded aquatic organisms and many biochemical reaction rates will double for every 10°C (18°F) temperature increase within their "preferred" range.
Optimum Lethal Growth Rate 0 10 20 30 40 50 Temperature (Celsius) Temp – Biological Effects
Temperature Standards Rolling 7-day average of maximum daily temperatures
Temperature – Deep Cr (Clack) 21.3 21.0 20.9 20.9 20.9 20.5 20.2 19.4 7-day max AVG = 20.6°C
Temperature – Causes • Loss of riparian shading • Warm water inputs • Retention ponds • Municipal or industrial wastewater • Stormwater runoff • Groundwater inputs • Weather • Air temperature, cloud cover, day length • Turbidity
Dissolved Oxygen • O2 gas dissolved in water • Required by nearly all aquatic life
DO – Solubility • Inverse, non-linear relationship to temperature • Decreases with decreasing barometric pressure • Weather, elevation • High salinity reduces solubility
DO – Units Concentration: mg/L = µg/mL = ppm (parts per million) Percent Saturation: DO % Sat. = Measured DO (mg/L) Solubility (mg/L)
DO – Sources • Photosynthesis • Influenced by sunshine, temperature, water velocity • Atmospheric Re-aeration • Turbulent mixing • Water velocity and depth • Oxygen deficit • Inflow of oxygenated water
DO – Sinks • Respiration • Greatest source of DO loss in summer • Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) • Decomposition of organic wastes • Standard measure is 5-day BOD = BOD5 • Nitrification (NBOD) • NH3 + O2 = NO3
DO – Diel Fluctuations PM Dissolved Oxygen AM Time of Day
Salmonid Spawning thru Fry Emergence Water Quality Standard > 11 mg/L Intergravel Standard > 6 mg/L unless Intergravel DO > 8 mg/L > 9 mg/L or Natural conditions > 95% sat. Cold-water Aquatic Resources > 8 mg/L Natural conditions > 90% sat. Cool-water Aquatic Resources > 6.5 mg/L Warm-water Aquatic Resources > 5.5 mg/L DO – Standards
Measuring DO and Temp • Measure Immediately - In Field • Measure Both at Same Time • Recording Time is Crucial • Sample Collection • Below surface ~ 4 inches (or ½ way to bottom of shallow stream) • Cap DO bottle underwater