Science activity #50138,
updated 29 April 2022
San Francisco Bay Study
Description / purpose
The San Francisco Bay Study (Bay Study) was established in 1980 to determine the effects of freshwater outflow on the abundance and distribution of fish and mobile crustaceans in the San Francisco Estuary, primarily downstream of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Sampling ranges from south of the Dumbarton Bridge in South San Francisco Bay, to just west of Alcatraz Island in Central San Francisco Bay, throughout San Pablo and Suisun bays, north to the confluence Steamboat and Cache sloughs on the Sacramento River, and east to Old River Flats on the San Joaquin River. The open water or boat survey samples 52 stations monthly: 35 original stations, 7 stations added in 1988, 4 stations added in 1991, and 6 stations added in 1994. The study included a beach seine survey, discontinued in 1987, and a shore-based ringnet survey for crabs, discontinued in 1994.
The Bay Study uses a 42-foot stern trawler to sample with 2 trawl nets at each open water station. The otter trawl, which samples demersal fishes, shrimp, and crabs, is towed against the current at a standard engine rpm for 5 minutes then retrieved. The midwater trawl, which samples pelagic fishes, is towed with the current at a standard engine rpm for 12 minutes and retrieved obliquely such that all depths are sampled equally. The open water survey included a plankton net that sampled larval fish and crustaceans, but this was discontinued in 1989.
Fish, caridean shrimp, and brachyuran crabs are identified, measured, and counted. Shrimp and crabs are also sexed. Sampling effort is quantified (i.e. distance towed, volume of water filtered) and salinity, water temperature, Secchi depth, and station depth are measured;wave height, tide, cloud cover, and tow direction are categorized. The length, catch, and effort data is used to calculate catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) by species and age class. The CPUE data is used to calculate monthly and annual abundance indices, which are used to track seasonal and annual population trends. Important factors that control or regulate abundance and distribution of fish and mobile crustaceans in the estuary include salinity, temperature, freshwater outflow, ocean temperature, upwelling, and surface currents, primary and secondary productivity, and introduced species. We are interested in how species respond to changes in the physical environment on several temporal scales - seasonal, annual, decadal, and longer.
We produce several annual Status and Trends reports that summarize recent changes for the most commonly collected species. These reports are published in the Spring issue of the IEP Newsletter, which can be found at http://iep.water.ca.gov/report/newsletter. The 1999 IEP Technical Report, "Report on the 1980-1995 Fish, Shrimp, and Crab Sampling in the San Francisco Estuary, California", is a good source of basic information. This report is out-of-print, but can be found at www.water.ca.gov/iep/docs/tech_rpts/tech_rprt_63_toc.html.
website: https://water.ca.gov/-/media/DWR-Website/Web-Pages/Programs/Environmental-Services/Interagency-Ecological-Program/Files/2019-IEP-Work-Plan_2018-12-11.pdf?la=en&hash=C305D1B1DA7931D95E8676247669F098F26A28FA
Linked science activities
None specifiedCollaborators
None specifiedActivity status
- 1 Awarded / Initiating (1972)
- 2 In progress / Ongoing (1972 - 2019)
- 3 Complete
Funding summary
Total allocated funding: $0
Location
Subbasins
Delta regions
Geographic tags
None specified
Products and outputs
Type | Title | Description | Views |
---|---|---|---|
San Francisco Bay Study FTP site | File Transfer Protocal website used to access data | 0 | |
San Francisco Bay Study Boat Stations Map | table listing the station number, latitude, longit | 0 | |
San Francisco Bay Study Data Report Methods | Report outlining sampling methods and data analysi | 0 | |
San Francisco Bay Study Station Locations table | table outlining the locations of boat, beach seine | 0 | |
Guidelines and standard procedures for continuous water-quality monitors | Guidelines and standard procedures for continuous | 0 | |
Quality Assurance & Quality Control (QA/QC) Program for DWR data | The QA/QC Program implements our QA/QC Policy thro | 0 |
Type and context
Science action area
Management themes
None specified
Science themes
Types
None specified
Science functions
None specified
Management actions
None specified
Science Topics
Lead implementing organization
Partner implementing organizations
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation [USBR]
,
California Department of Water Resource [DWR]
,
California Department of Fish and Wildlife [CDFW]
Funding organizations
None specified
Funding programs
None specified
Funding sources
None specified