Document Details

Selenium in Muscle Plugs of White Sturgeon from North San Francisco Bay, 2015-2017

Jennifer Sun, Jay Davis, Robin Stewart | February 1st, 2019


This report presents the findings from a study evaluating selenium concentrations in white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) muscle tissues collected from live sturgeon during the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s fall sturgeon tagging studies in North San Francisco Bay. The goal of this study was to non-lethally collect a large number of sturgeon muscle plugs and analyze them for selenium to (1) establish an understanding of current status, trends, and causes of variability in sturgeon muscle selenium concentrations; and (2) evaluate the potential for long-term sturgeon selenium monitoring with muscle plugs, through development of field and laboratory methods and informing the monitoring design. Monitoring of selenium in white sturgeon is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of the North Bay Selenium Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) in protecting sturgeon from selenium toxicity. This technical report provides documentation of the study and presents its major findings in the context of all historically available data on sturgeon muscle selenium concentrations in San Francisco Bay. 

Keywords

fisheries, monitoring, pollutants, Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, water quality