Pass

3 out of 3 indicators were rated as PASS.

All three indicators must pass for the bay to be rated as PASS.

Learn more about how this report is created

Summary:

The overall health in Sarasota Bay showed improvement in 2017, with concentrations of both chlorophyll a and phosphorus lower than in 2016. Nitrogen levels increased slightly, but are still relatively low.

Water Quality: The mean concentration of chlorophyll a in Sarasota Bay fell to 0.0056 mg/l in 2017, bringing it below the threshold value and improving its rating to "Good". Phosphorus levels, already low, were also down from 2016, and at 0.0598 mg/l remain below the target. Nitrogen concentration rose slightly to 0.3666 mg/l, but water quality overall remained very good. The target and threshold values for nitrogen in Sarasota Bay are still advisory, as no official regulatory threshold has been established. The mean for chlorophyll a was calculated as an arithmetic mean and the means for nitrogen and phosphorus were calculated as geometric means (per the Numeric Nutrient Criteria outlined in the Florida Administrative Code, section 62-302.532). 

Biotic Indicator: A survey of the biotic indicator, seagrass, was performed in 2016 by the Southwest Florida Water Management District. In 2016, the total area of seagrass in the lower portion of Sarasota Bay (the area within Sarasota County) was estimated to be 3,639 acres, well above the target of 2,022 acres.

Sarasota Bay

Sarasota Bay

Water Chemistry Ratings

Total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and chlorophyll a levels are monitored carefully by water resource managers and used by regulatory authorities to determine whether a bay meets the water quality standards mandated by the Clean Water Act. The trend graphs for these indicators are shown below, along with their target and threshold values. A target value is a desirable goal to be attained, while a threshold is an undesirable level which is to be avoided. An individual indicator receives an "Excellent" rating if its mean value is below the target, a "Good" rating if its mean value is above the target but does not exceed the threshold, and a "Caution" rating if the mean value exceeds the threshold. Learn More about these ratings and how they are calculated »

The charts below illustrate the general trend of water quality parameters. They show a six-month running average, which moderates high and low values in the data.

Chart Legend
  • Six-month Moving Average
  • Annual Mean
  • Target
  • Threshold
Good

Chlorophyll a

Units: ug/l Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 27.60 49.00
Mean 5.65 4.76 3.93333 5.2000000000
Low 0.75 0.15
No. of Samples 252 8275
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean
Excellent

Nitrogen, Total

Score: Excellent How was this determined?
Units: mg/L Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 0.986 1.870
Mean 0.367 0.340 0.17519962 0.5100000000
Low 0.066 0.030
No. of Samples 251 5144
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean
Targets and thresholds shown on this graph are advisory approximations computed by Sarasota County using recent data. Regulatory thresholds have not been established. Learn more about Sarasota Bay Nitrogen targets/thresholds »
Excellent

Phosphorus, Total

Score: Excellent How was this determined?
Units: mg/L Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 0.990 4.400
Mean 0.060 0.083 0.13251031 0.1500000000
Low 0.019 0.002
No. of Samples 313 5346
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Dissolved Oxygen

Units: mg/l Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 10.30 13.80
Mean 6.71 6.70 1.4609
Low 5.01 0.10
No. of Samples 234 16787
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Apparent Color

Units: PCU Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 25.00 98.00
Mean 9.88 12.84 9.29294
Low 2.00 0.00
No. of Samples 243 5169
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

BOD, Biochemical oxygen demand

Units: mg/l Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 4.00 9.20
Mean 1.09 1.17 0.73852
Low 0.50 0.50
No. of Samples 243 3809
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Dissolved oxygen saturation

Units: percent (%) Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 143.30 214.71
Mean 98.15 97.84 18.95255
Low 80.00 21.92
No. of Samples 295 16135
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Karenia brevis ("red tide")

Units: #/l Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 542000.00 8640000.00
Mean 29863.64 71434.54 448322.17532
Low 0.00 0.00
No. of Samples 176 2826
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Light Attenuation

Units: K(1/m) Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 2.92 5.68
Mean 0.70 0.69 0.32659
Low 0.16 0.04
No. of Samples 220 4224
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Nitrogen, Ammonia + Ammonium as N

Units: ug/l Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 18.00 159.00
Mean 6.75 10.96 10.42909
Low 5.00 5.00
No. of Samples 243 4324
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Nitrogen, Kjeldahl

Units: mg/L Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 0.980 1.850
Mean 0.378 0.373 0.17836869
Low 0.060 0.000
No. of Samples 313 5457
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Nitrogen, Nitrite + Nitrate as N

Units: mg/L Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 0.010 0.210
Mean 0.005 0.008 0.00967749
Low 0.005 0.001
No. of Samples 311 6302
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

pH

Units: None Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 8.40 9.62
Mean 8.07 8.07 0.32799
Low 7.78 3.90
No. of Samples 377 14199
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Salinity

Units: PSS Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 38.90 68.20
Mean 33.62 33.27 2.38792
Low 25.45 3.60
No. of Samples 235 18297
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Specific conductance

Units: umho Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 58200.00 94950.00
Mean 50886.95 51653.49 3534.38406
Low 40030.00 31.20
No. of Samples 295 5621
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Temperature, water

Units: deg F Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 91.89 100.40
Mean 76.03 76.96 9.09276
Low 59.90 35.24
No. of Samples 435 18849
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Turbidity

Units: NTU Year
2017
Historical
period of record
High 10.00 39.00
Mean 2.63 2.64 2.43468
Low 0.60 0.03
No. of Samples 252 14871
  • Six-month
    Moving Average
  • Annual
    Mean

Annual Averages

Indicator Units 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Trend
Dissolved Oxygen mg/l 6.71 7.14 6.96 7.75 6.71
Dissolved oxygen saturation percent (%) 96.16 97.22 103.56 99.90 98.15
Light Attenuation K(1/m) 0.67 0.68 0.69 0.74 0.70
Salinity PSS 33.45 33.80 33.64 33.84 33.62
Turbidity NTU 2.91 2.69 2.70 3.17 2.63

Other Measures of Bay Health

In addition to nutrient levels and chlorophyll concentration, dissolved oxygen levels, and water clarity are also objective indicators of bay health. These have complex interactive cycles which are affected by rainfall, temperature, and tidal action, as well as other factors. High nutrient levels (nitrogen and phosphorus) can stimulate excessive growth of marine algae (indicated by chlorophyll a level), resulting in reduced water clarity (and increased light attenuation) and depleted oxygen levels. Both plants and animals in a bay need oxygen to survive, and the seagrasses which provide food and cover for bay creatures need light for photosynthesis.

Bay Contour Maps (2017)

Contour mapping is one of the best ways to visualize spatial differences in coastal water quality. The interactive map shown below presents monthly data for one selected water quality indicator atop an aerial view of the bay. Choose a different water quality parameter from the list at the top to change the map. Learn More about Water Quality Contour Mapping »

Showing 2017 Monthly Contour Maps for: January
Loading interactive contour map viewer...
Contour Visibility:

Visit the Water Quality Contour Mapping Tool to view and compare monthly water quality contour maps for ten different water quality indicators. In addition, you can generate your own custom maps.

Contour Legend:

  • Less than 1 ug/l
  • 1.0 - 5.9 ug/l
  • 6.0 - 10.9 ug/l
  • 11.0 - 17.9 ug/l
  • Greater than 18 ug/l

Seagrasses

Among the most important habitats in Florida's estuarine environments, seagrass beds are indispensable for the role they play in cycling nutrients, supplying food for wildlife, stabilizing sediments, and providing habitat for juvenile and adult finfish and shellfish. Use the interactive map below to observe the size, density and location of seagrass beds from year to year. The graph shows how the total amount of seagrass in the bay has changed over time. Seagrass calculations are aggregates of patchy and continuous seagrass measurements only. Recordings of attached algae are not included in these summaries.
Learn More about Seagrasses »

Showing Seagrass Coverage for :
Loading interactive seagrass coverage viewer...
Loading interactive chart...
  • Target 2,022 acres

Visit our Seagrass page to discover the beauty and importance of seagrass habitats, and sign up to help monitor their health.

Impervious Features

Sarasota Bay is located within the Sarasota Bay Watershed. View details about the Sarasota Bay Watershed »

Rain that falls on land that is in a natural state is absorbed and filtered by soils and vegetation as it makes it way into underground aquifers. However, in developed areas, "impervious surfaces" impede this process and contribute to polluted urban runoff entering surface waters. These surfaces include human infrastructure like roads, sidewalks, driveways and parking lots that are covered by impenetrable materials such as asphalt, concrete, brick and stone, as well as buildings and other permanent structures. Soils that have been disturbed and compacted by urban development are often impervious as well. Learn more about Impervious Features »

The Sarasota County Stormwater Environmental Utility (SEU) mapped impervious surfaces in the County in 2014. A map showing impervious surfaces can be viewed using the interactive Sarasota NPDES Viewer.

19% of the land area within the Sarasota Bay Watershed is covered by impervious surfaces

Impervious Surface Coverage by Type

Land Use / Land Cover

Land use within a bay's watershed has a major effect on its water quality. In general, less development means better water quality. Land Cover/Land Use classifications categorize land in terms of its observed physical surface characteristics (upland or wetland, e.g.), and also reflect the types of activity that are taking place on it (agriculture, urban/built-up, utilities, etc.). Florida uses as its standard a set of statewide classifications which were developed by the Florida Department of Transportation. Learn More about Land Use and Land Cover »

Sarasota Bay is located within the Sarasota Bay Watershed. The chart below shows the land use / land cover characteristics for Sarasota Bay Watershed within the boundary of this Water Atlas. View details about the Sarasota Bay Watershed »

Acreage and Percentage within each Land Use / Land Cover Category for Sarasota Bay Watershed
Land Use Classification 1990 2005 2011 2014 2017 2020 Trend
Urban & Built-up 32,90853.3% 37,84461.3% 38,34362.1% 37,98761.6% 38,74962.8% 56,97059.1%
Agriculture 6,33810.3% 2,4974% 2,2153.6% 2,3093.7% 1,8223% 2,9863.1%
Rangeland 5470.9% 1990.3% 2250.4% 4300.7% 2080.3% 2610.3%
Upland Forests 3,5885.8% 2,1093.4% 1,8743% 1,9233.1% 1,7562.8% 2,0752.2%
Water 13,35021.6% 14,22723.1% 14,27823.1% 14,13122.9% 14,25523.1% 25,36026.3%
Wetlands 2,8704.7% 2,2273.6% 2,2293.6% 2,3723.8% 2,3273.8% 4,8895.1%
Barren Land 290% 90% 990.2% 1090.2% 1000.2% 760.1%
Transportation and Utilities 1,8453% 2,6024.2% 2,4524% 2,4534% 2,5114.1% 3,7833.9%
Land Use Chart

Data Sources

The data sources listed below provided water quality data used to create the report on this page. Not all data sources provided data for every bay, and not every Bay Conditions Report used data from all listed data sources. While some data sources have no data for the scored year, they provided period-of-record (historical high, mean, low) data. Click on a data source name to review its metadata.