Title of article
The spatial variability of nitrogen and phosphorus concentration in a sand aquifer influenced by onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems: a case study on St. George Island, Florida
Author/Authors
D. Reide Corbett، نويسنده , , Kevin Dillon، نويسنده , , William Burnett، نويسنده , , Geoff Schaefer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
9
From page
337
To page
345
Abstract
Groundwater from a shallow freshwater lens on St. George Island, a barrier island located in the Panhandle of Florida, eventually discharges into Apalachicola Bay or the Gulf of Mexico. Nutrient concentrations in groundwaters were monitored downfield from three onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems (OSTDS) on the island. Estimates of natural groundwater nutrient concentrations were obtained from an adjacent uninhabited island. Silicate, which was significantly higher in the imported drinking water relative to the surficial aquifer on St. George Island (12.2±1.9 mg Si l−1 and 2.9±0.2 mg Si l−1, respectively), was used as a natural conservative tracer. Our observations showed that nitrogen concentrations were attenuated to a greater extent than that of phosphorus relative to the conservative tracer. At the current setback distance (23 m), both nitrogen and phosphate concentrations are still elevated above natural levels by as much as 2 and 7 times, respectively. Increasing the setback distance to 50 m and raising the drainfields 1 m above the ground surface could reduce nutrient levels to natural concentrations (1.1±0.1 mg N l−1, 0.20±0.02 mg P l−1).
Keywords
Tank effluent , nitrogen , Nutrients enrichment , groundwater , Phosphorus
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Record number
729825
Link To Document