Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates

Accurate estimates of freshwater flow to the San Francisco Estuary are important in successfully regulating this water body, in protecting its beneficial uses, and in accurately modeling its hydrodynamic and water-quality transport regime. For regulatory purposes, freshwater flow to the estuary is n...

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Published in:San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
Main Authors: Hutton, Paul, Rath, John, Ateljevich, Eli, Roy, Sujoy
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: California Digital Library (CDL) 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4
id crescholarship:10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4
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spelling crescholarship:10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4 2024-03-03T08:43:52+00:00 Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates Hutton, Paul Rath, John Ateljevich, Eli Roy, Sujoy 2021 http://dx.doi.org/10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4 unknown California Digital Library (CDL) San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science volume 19, issue 4 ISSN 1546-2366 Water Science and Technology Aquatic Science journal-article 2021 crescholarship https://doi.org/10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4 2024-02-07T10:56:39Z Accurate estimates of freshwater flow to the San Francisco Estuary are important in successfully regulating this water body, in protecting its beneficial uses, and in accurately modeling its hydrodynamic and water-quality transport regime. For regulatory purposes, freshwater flow to the estuary is not directly measured; rather, it is estimated from a daily balance of upstream Delta inflows, exports, and in-Delta water use termed the net Delta outflow index (NDOI). Field research in the 1960s indicated that NDOI estimates are biased low in summer–fall and biased high in winter–spring as a result of conflating Delta island evapotranspiration estimates with the sum of ungauged hydrologic interactions between channels and islands referred to as net channel depletions. In this work, we employed a 50-year observed salinity record along with gauged tidal flows and an ensemble of five empirical flow-salinity (X2) models to test whether a seasonal bias in Delta outflow estimates could be inferred. We accomplished this objective by conducting statistical analyses and evaluating whether model skill could be improved through seasonal NDOI flow adjustments. Assuming that model residuals are associated with channel depletion uncertainty, our findings corroborate the 1960s research and suggest that channel depletions are biased low in winter months (i.e., NDOI is biased high) and biased high in late summer and early fall months (i.e., NDOI is biased low). The magnitude of seasonal bias, which can reach 1,000 cfs, is a small percentage of typical winter outflow but represents a significant percentage of typical summer outflow. Our findings were derived from five independently developed models, and are consistent with the physical understanding of water exchanges on the islands. This work provides motivation for improved characterization of these exchanges to improve Delta outflow estimates, particularly during drought periods when water supplies are scarce and must be carefully managed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Delta Island eScholarship Repository (University of California) San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science 19 4
institution Open Polar
collection eScholarship Repository (University of California)
op_collection_id crescholarship
language unknown
topic Water Science and Technology
Aquatic Science
spellingShingle Water Science and Technology
Aquatic Science
Hutton, Paul
Rath, John
Ateljevich, Eli
Roy, Sujoy
Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
topic_facet Water Science and Technology
Aquatic Science
description Accurate estimates of freshwater flow to the San Francisco Estuary are important in successfully regulating this water body, in protecting its beneficial uses, and in accurately modeling its hydrodynamic and water-quality transport regime. For regulatory purposes, freshwater flow to the estuary is not directly measured; rather, it is estimated from a daily balance of upstream Delta inflows, exports, and in-Delta water use termed the net Delta outflow index (NDOI). Field research in the 1960s indicated that NDOI estimates are biased low in summer–fall and biased high in winter–spring as a result of conflating Delta island evapotranspiration estimates with the sum of ungauged hydrologic interactions between channels and islands referred to as net channel depletions. In this work, we employed a 50-year observed salinity record along with gauged tidal flows and an ensemble of five empirical flow-salinity (X2) models to test whether a seasonal bias in Delta outflow estimates could be inferred. We accomplished this objective by conducting statistical analyses and evaluating whether model skill could be improved through seasonal NDOI flow adjustments. Assuming that model residuals are associated with channel depletion uncertainty, our findings corroborate the 1960s research and suggest that channel depletions are biased low in winter months (i.e., NDOI is biased high) and biased high in late summer and early fall months (i.e., NDOI is biased low). The magnitude of seasonal bias, which can reach 1,000 cfs, is a small percentage of typical winter outflow but represents a significant percentage of typical summer outflow. Our findings were derived from five independently developed models, and are consistent with the physical understanding of water exchanges on the islands. This work provides motivation for improved characterization of these exchanges to improve Delta outflow estimates, particularly during drought periods when water supplies are scarce and must be carefully managed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hutton, Paul
Rath, John
Ateljevich, Eli
Roy, Sujoy
author_facet Hutton, Paul
Rath, John
Ateljevich, Eli
Roy, Sujoy
author_sort Hutton, Paul
title Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
title_short Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
title_full Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
title_fullStr Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
title_full_unstemmed Apparent Seasonal Bias in Delta Outflow Estimates as Revealed in the Historical Salinity Record of the San Francisco Estuary: Implications for Delta Net Channel Depletion Estimates
title_sort apparent seasonal bias in delta outflow estimates as revealed in the historical salinity record of the san francisco estuary: implications for delta net channel depletion estimates
publisher California Digital Library (CDL)
publishDate 2021
url http://dx.doi.org/10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4
genre Delta Island
genre_facet Delta Island
op_source San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
volume 19, issue 4
ISSN 1546-2366
op_doi https://doi.org/10.15447/sfews.2021v19iss4art4
container_title San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
container_volume 19
container_issue 4
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