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Tampa Bay Water Quality Gets A Green Light - Again

Tampa Bay Estuary Program
Chart of water quality in Tampa Bay since 1975

The Tampa Bay Estuary Program is reporting that all of Tampa Bay met it's goals for water quality 2013. That's the second year in a row that's happened, as scientists collecting the data report record water clarity in many areas of the bay.

Here's their news release:

All major segments of Tampa Bay met water quality goals in 2013, for the second year in a row, as scientists collecting the data report record water clarity in many areas of the bay. To help track seagrass recovery, the Tampa Bay Estuary Program annually compares water quality to established targets in the bay and reports the results through the "Decision Matrix." This simple report card uses a red, green and yellow color system to assess overall water quality in the bay. The rating system considers the amount of microscopic algae in the water (as indicated by chlorophyll a, a plant pigment), as well as the amount of visible sunlight penetrating the water column.    "Green" means a bay segment is meeting water quality targets, while "red" means it is not. "Yellow" indicates that the area bears watching. The 2013 analysis shows a green light across the board for all four bay segments: Hillsborough Bay, Old Tampa Bay, Middle Tampa Bay, and Lower Tampa Bay. This means that water quality is good enough to foster continued recovery of underwater seagrasses that are the backbone of a healthy bay.   EPC teams conducting the sampling found entire bay segments last year where every station they tested had visible bottom – even in waters more than 30 feet deep, said Tom Ash, assistant director of the Water Management Division for the Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough County. EPC collects water quality data monthly from 45 sampling stations on which the annual assessments are based. More information about the bay's overall health will come later this year when seagrass surveys conducted by the Southwest Florida Water Management District are released. The last surveys, covering 2010-2012, documented an increase of 3,250 acres, or more than 1,000 acres per year. TBEP Scientist Ed Sherwood noted that aerial photographs taken this winter have shown patchy seagrass in an area of Feather Sound previously bare of vegetation -- a positive sign that likely stems from improved water clarity in that troubled area.

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