Literature DB >> 27392629

Trajectories of river chemical quality issues over the Longue Durée: the Seine River (1900S-2010).

M Meybeck1, L Lestel2, C Carré3, G Bouleau4, J Garnier1, J M Mouchel1.   

Abstract

River quality trajectories are presented for (i) organic pollution, (ii) eutrophication, (iii) nitrate pollution, and (iv) metal contamination over the Longue Durée (130 to 70 years). They are defined by a quantified state indicator (S) specific to each issue, compared to drivers (D) or pressures (P) and to social responses (R) that reflect the complex interactions between society and river quality. The Lower Seine River, naturally sensitive to anthropogenic pressures, greatly impacted by Paris urban growth, industrialization, and intensive agriculture, and well documented by the PIREN-Seine 25-year research program, was chosen to illustrate these trajectories. State indicators, dissolved oxygen, algal pigments, nitrate, and heavy metals (Cd, Cr, Hg, Pb, Zn) in sediments have only been monitored by river basin authorities since 1971. Therefore, their past changes have been reconstructed using three approaches: (i) reassessment of historical sources, (ii) pressure-state models that reconstruct past water quality, and (iii) sedimentary archives of past persistent contamination from dated floodplain cores. The indicators were then transformed into river quality status using contemporary water quality criteria throughout these records. Each environmental issue shows specific trajectories because each has its own relationship between the issue evidence and the social response, but all are characterized by very poor quality in the past, largely ignored: the long-term summer hypoxia (<1880-1995), the summer eutrophication peak (1965-2005), the growing nitrate level since the 1950s, recently stabilized but still high, and the extreme metal contamination (>1935-2000) that peaked in the 1960s. The efficiency of social responses has been highly variable but more efficient in the last 15-25 years.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Eutrophication; Nitrate; Organic pollution; River quality trajectory; Seine River; metals

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27392629     DOI: 10.1007/s11356-016-7124-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int        ISSN: 0944-1344            Impact factor:   4.223


  3 in total

1.  Watershed 'Chemical Cocktails': Forming Novel Elemental Combinations in Anthropocene Fresh Waters.

Authors:  Sujay S Kaushal; Arthur J Gold; Susana Bernal; Tammy A Newcomer Johnson; Kelly Addy; Amy Burgin; Douglas A Burns; Ashley A Coble; Eran Hood; Yuehan Lu; Paul Mayer; Elizabeth C Minor; Andrew W Schroth; Philippe Vidon; Henry Wilson; Marguerite A Xenopoulos; Thomas Doody; Joseph Galella; Phillip Goodling; Katherine Haviland; Shahan Haq; Barret Wessel; Kelsey Wood; Norbert Jaworski; Kenneth T Belt
Journal:  Biogeochemistry       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 4.825

2.  Tracing the sources of suspended sediment and particle-bound trace metal elements in an urban catchment coupling elemental and isotopic geochemistry, and fallout radionuclides.

Authors:  Claire Froger; Sophie Ayrault; Olivier Evrard; Gaël Monvoisin; Louise Bordier; Irène Lefèvre; Cécile Quantin
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2018-08-10       Impact factor: 4.223

3.  Chemometric Assessment of Bulgarian Wastewater Treatment Plants' Effluents.

Authors:  Galina Yotova; Tony Venelinov; Stefan Tsakovski
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-09-25       Impact factor: 4.411

  3 in total

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