We intensively examined the recreational water quality of the Colorado River and 26 tributaries in Grand Canyon National Park over four consecutive summers. Highly ephemeral precipitation cycles and arid watershed hydrologies were the principal factors influencing water quality. Fecal coliforms (FC) in the river and most tributaries were ≤10 FC 100 ml-1 and ≤20 FC 100 ml-1, respectively, during drought cycles. During rainfall cycles, FC densities were highly variable and often exceeded recreational contact standards. FC were not found to vary significantly in response to diurnal fluctuations in river stage height which resulted from hydroelectric stream flow regulation. River and tributary bottom sediments harbored FC in densities averaging 10 to 100 times those in the overlying waters. Sediment FC densities were not found to be reliable indicators of overlying water quality when storm flow and nonstorm flow periods were compared.
CITATION STYLE
Tunnicliff, B., & Brickler, S. K. (1984). Recreational water quality analyses of the Colorado River corridor in Grand Canyon. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 48(5), 909–917. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.48.5.909-917.1984
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