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Journal article

Calculating discharge of phosphorus and nitrogen with groundwater base flow to a small urban stream reach

Abstract

Elevated levels of nutrients, especially phosphorus, in urban streams can lead to eutrophication and general degradation of stream water quality. Contributions of phosphorus from groundwater have typically been assumed minor, though elevated concentrations have been associated with riparian areas and urban settings. The objective of this study was to investigate the importance of groundwater as a pathway for phosphorus and nitrogen input to a gaining urban stream. The stream at the 28-m study reach was 3–5m wide and straight, flowing generally eastward, with a relatively smooth bottom of predominantly sand, with some areas of finer sediments and a few boulders. Temperature-based methods were used to estimate the groundwater flux distribution. Detailed concentration distributions in discharging groundwater were mapped using in-stream piezometers and diffusion-based peepers, and showed elevated levels of soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) and ammonium compared to the stream (while nitrate levels were lower), especially along the south bank, where groundwater fluxes were lower and geochemically reducing conditions dominated. Field evidence suggests the ammonium may originate from nearby landfills, but that local sediments likely contribute the SRP. Ammonium and SRP mass discharges with groundwater were then estimated as the product of the respective concentration distributions and the groundwater flux distribution. These were determined as approximately 9 and 200gd−1 for SRP and ammonium, respectively, which compares to stream mass discharges over the observed range of base flows of 20–1100 and 270–7600gd−1, respectively. This suggests that groundwater from this small reach, and any similar areas along Dyment’s Creek, has the potential to contribute substantially to the stream nutrient concentrations.

Authors

Fitzgerald A; Roy JW; Smith JE

Journal

Journal of Hydrology, Vol. 528, , pp. 138–151

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

September 1, 2015

DOI

10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.06.038

ISSN

0022-1694

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