Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 17 segundos...
Inicio  /  Hydrology  /  Vol: 5 Par: 1 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Characterizing Total Phosphorus in Current and Geologic Utah Lake Sediments: Implications for Water Quality Management Issues

Hani Yousef Abu-Hmeidan    
Gustavious P. Williams and A. Woodruff Miller    

Resumen

Utah Lake is highly eutrophic with large phosphorous inflows and a large internal phosphorous reservoir in the sediment. There are debates over whether this phosphorous is from geologic or more recent anthropologic sources. This study characterizes total phosphorous in geologic and current lake sediments to attempt to address that question. The average total phosphorous concentrations in the lake sediment were 666 ppm, with most samples in the 600 to 800 ppm range with a few larger values. Concentrations in historic geologic sediments were not statistically different from lake sediments. A spatial analysis showed that phosphorous distributions appeared continuous from the lake to the shore and that high and low values could be attributed to areas of seeps and springs (low) or feed lots and waste water discharge (high). These results indicate that geologic sediments without anthropogenic impacts are not statistically different than current lake sediments. The high values indicate that internal natural phosphorous loadings could be significant and the impaired state may be relatively insensitive to external anthropogenic loadings. If this is the case, then mitigation efforts to address anthropogenic sources may have minimal impacts. This case study presents an impaired water body where non-anthropogenic nutrient sources are significant and shows that reservoir management decisions should consider these non-anthropogenic phosphorous sources relative to anthropogenic sources. This study can serve as a template for evaluating the importance of geologic phosphorous sources for management decisions.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Hani Yousef Abu-Hmeidan, Gustavious P. Williams and A. Woodruff Miller    
Revista: Hydrology

 
Caroline A. Ouko, Richard Mulwa, Robert Kibugi, Margaret A. Owuor, Julie G. Zaehringer and Nicholas O. Oguge    
Identifying and characterizing ecosystem services (ES) has been shown to have an important role in sustainable natural resource management. However, understanding communities’ perspectives is critical in determining opportunities and constraints fo... ver más
Revista: Environments

 
Kwang-Koo Kim, Se-Yeong Hamm, Jae-Yeol Cheong, Soon-Oh Kim and Seong-Taek Yun    
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) is one of several useful strategies for capturing greenhouse gases to counter global climate change. In CCS, greenhouse gases such as CO2 that are emitted from stacks are isolated in underground geological storage. Natura... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Karina Y. Gutiérrez-Jurado, Alexander G. Fernald, Steven J. Guldan and Carlos G. Ochoa    
Better understanding of surface water (SW) and groundwater (GW) interactions and water balances has become indispensable for water management decisions. This study sought to characterize SW-GW interactions in three crop fields located in three different ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
T. Das, N. Apu, M.S. Hoque, M. Hadiuzzaman, Wang Xu     Pág. 5059 - 5071
User satisfaction is one of the key factors in running a successful city bus service from both passengers? and operators? perspective. To improve the facilities provided by public buses, a performance analysis is essential. Conventional empirical models,... ver más