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Final Report BOR R13AP80034 FY13: (A Study of Climate Change Impacts on Water Quality and Internal Nutrient Recycling in Lake Mead, Arizona-Nevada)

Product of A Study of Climate Change Impacts on Water Quality and Internal Nutrient Recycling in Lake Mead, Arizona-Nevada

Dates

Creation
2017-08-24 16:57:33
Last Update
2017-09-07 14:40:27
Start Date
2013-10-01
End Date
2015-09-30
Start Date
2014-10-01 06:00:00
End Date
2015-10-01 05:59:59

Citation

LCC Network Data Steward(Point of Contact), Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), Todd Tietjen(Principal Investigator), Al Preston(Co-Investigator), John E. List(Co-Investigator), Kristen Bowman Kavanagh(Co-Investigator), Li Ding(Co-Investigator), Flow Science, Inc.(Cooperator/Partner), 2017-08-24(creation), 2017-09-07(lastUpdate), 2013-10-01(Start), 2015-09-30(End), Final Report BOR R13AP80034 FY13: (A Study of Climate Change Impacts on Water Quality and Internal Nutrient Recycling in Lake Mead, Arizona-Nevada), https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/599f057de4b0493555818a71

Summary

Southern Nevada Water Authority will add new modeling and analytical capabilities to tools developed as part of a previous WaterSMART Climate Analysis Tools Grant that assessed impacts of climate change on water quality and sediment transport in Lake Mead. Project results are intended to increase an understanding of how water quality characteristics and nutrient levels in Lake Mead may be affected by climate change.

Contacts

Attached Files

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md_metadata.json 80.91 KB application/json
FinalReport_BOR_R13AP80034 _FY13.pdf
“FinalReport_BOR_R13AP80034 _FY13.pdf”
112.32 MB application/pdf
Shapefile: LakeMead.zip
LakeMead.zip 956.84 KB

Material Request Instructions

Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative(Distributor)

Purpose

The goal of this proposed project is to assess the potential for changes in water quality and trophic status of Lake Mead due to increased internal nutrient recycling that may result from warmer water temperatures and lower dissolved oxygen concentrations which are induced by climate change. Specifically this project will address: 1. The potential for warmer climatic conditions to lead to increased internal nutrient recycling due to lower dissolved oxygen concentrations in Lake Mead. 2. The effect of increased internal nutrient recycling on general water quality and trophic status of Lake Mead. 3. The effect of increased internal nutrient recycling on the potential for large algal blooms, which may reduce water transparency and lead to a general degradation in recreational uses in the lake. 4. The potential for increased internal nutrient recycling and productivity to lead to further decreases in dissolved oxygen concentrations and additional nutrient release through “feed-back” mechanisms.

Map

Communities

  • Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

Associated Items

Tags

Provenance

generated using ADIwg mdTranslator 2.14.2

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
File Identifier file identifier 599f057de4b0493555818a71

Shapefile Extension

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size979805
dateUploadedThu Aug 24 11:06:52 MDT 2017
checksum
value2d2b2ee0be2baa7b6468653e5193c95b
typeMD5
nameLakeMead
nativeCrsEPSG:4269

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