|
Boston Harbor
and Massachusetts Bay
Massachusetts
Water Resources Authority
Boston Harbor's Tributary
Rivers
The Massachusetts Water Resources Authority
monitors water quality
at
more than 70 locations in Boston Harbor and its tributary rivers. Boston Harbor is an estuary--a marine ecosystem where
fresh water from the rivers enters the ocean. The largest rivers draining into
Boston Harbor are the Charles, Neponset, and Mystic. Since
1989, MWRA has regularly monitored water quality in these rivers, measuring bacteria, algae,
water clarity, dissolved oxygen, nutrients, and suspended
solids.
See comparison of clarity in Boston Harbor and Rivers
Download river monitoring data.
CHARLES
RIVER |
The Charles meanders nearly 80 miles from Echo Lake in Hopkinton to
Boston Harbor. The river's mouth, originally a tidal estuarine saltmarsh,
has been dammed since the early 1900s. The dam controls river flow and flooding, and fills the Charles River basin, a popular urban recreational
area. However, the river's
ecosystem is degraded by the dam, as it prevents tidal flushing, trapping pollutants in
the basin.
Charles River water quality |
|
|
|
|
MYSTIC
RIVER |
The Mystic flows from the Mystic Lakes in Winchester
and Arlington, east through Medford, somerville, and Chelsea to
Boston Harbor.
Only five miles long, much of the river winds through
dense residential and industrial areas, and is impacted by pollution
from surrounding development. The Mystic
is dammed at its mouth.
Mystic River water quality
|
|
|
|
|
NEPONSET
RIVER |
The Neponset River travels 28 miles from
Foxboro to Boston
Harbor. The Neponset estuary is the harbor's largest saltmarsh, and serves as important
wildlife habitat and a natural filter of pollutants.
The estuary is designated as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC), one of three such areas in the Neponset watershed.
Neponset River water quality |
|
Photo: Neponset River Watershed Association
|
More about Boston Harbor
|