Title of article
The strategic significance of wastewater sources to pollutant phosphorus levels in English rivers and to environmental management for rural, agricultural and urban catchments Review Article
Author/Authors
Colin Neal، نويسنده , , Helen P. Jarvie، نويسنده , , Paul J.A. Withers b، نويسنده , , Brian A. Whitton، نويسنده , , Margaret Neal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
16
From page
1485
To page
1500
Abstract
The relationship between soluble and particulate phosphorus was examined for 9 major UK rivers including 26 major tributaries and 68 monitoring points, covering wide-ranging rural and agricultural/urban impacted systems with catchment areas varying from 1 to 6000 km2 scales. Phosphorus concentrations in Soluble Reactive (SRP), Total Dissolved (TDP), Total (TP), Dissolved Hydrolysable (DHP) and Particulate (PP) forms correlated with effluent markers (sodium and boron) and SRP was generally dominant signifying the importance of sewage sources. Low flows were particularly enriched in SRP, TDP and TP for average SRP > 100 μg/l indicating low effluent dilution. At particularly low average concentrations, SRP increased with flow but effluent sources were still implicated as the effluent markers (boron in particular) increased likewise. For rural areas, DHP had proportionately high concentrations and SRP + DHP concentrations could exceed environmental thresholds currently set for SRP. Given DHP has a high bioavailability the environmental implications need further consideration. PP concentrations were generally highest at high flows but PP in the suspended solids was generally at its lowest and in general PP correlated with particulate organic carbon and more so than the suspended sediment in total.
Keywords
sediments , Pollution , Agriculture , Sewage , Particulate organic carbon , Phosphorus , Rivers
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Science of the Total Environment
Record number
986559
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