Title of article :
The relative contribution of sewage and diffuse phosphorus
sources in the River Avon catchment, southern England:
Implications for nutrient management
Author/Authors :
Michael J. BowesT، نويسنده , , John Hilton، نويسنده , , Gordon P. Irons، نويسنده , , Duncan D. Hornby، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
In order to effectively manage nutrient river load reductions and target remediation strategies, it is important to determine the
relative contributions of diffuse and point sources across the river catchment. This study used a geographical information
system (GIS) to apply phosphorus (P) export coefficients (obtained from the literature) to 58 water quality monitoring sites
across a large, urbanised, mixed land use catchment, typical of southern lowland England (the River Avon, Warwickshire, UK).
These coefficients were used to estimate the annual P load at each monitoring site, and also the relative contribution of point
source (from sewage treatment works (STW)) and diffuse input (from both livestock and agricultural land use). The estimated
annual P loads showed very close agreement (r2=0.98) with the measured total phosphorus (TP) loads. Sites with the highest
proportion of P derived from STW had the highest TP concentrations and loads, and also had greater variations between
seasons, with elevated P concentrations occurring during the summer months. The GIS model was re-run to determine the effect
of an 80% reduction in P output from STW serving over 10000 people, thereby assessing the effect of implementing the
European Union’s Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive (UWWTD). The exported TP load was reduced by 52%, but the
sites with the highest TP concentrations were still those with the highest proportion of P derived from STW. The GIS model was
re-run to estimate the impact of 80% P reductions at a further 11 STW of varying sizes. This reduced the total TP load by only
29 tonnes year 1, but greatly reduced the P concentrations in many highly nutrient contaminated tributaries. The number of
sites with P concentrations greater than 1 mg l 1 was cut from 15 (before UWWTD implementation) to 2. These findings
suggest that after UWWTD implementation, resources should focus on introducing tertiary sewage treatment at the remaining
large STW, before targeting diffuse inputs. This conclusion is also likely to apply to other lowland river catchments in southern
England, most of which have similar population densities to the River Avon.
Keywords :
Export coefficients , Phosphorus , nitrogen , Nutrient reduction , GIS , Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment