Literature DB >> 27697742

The oxygen isotopic composition of phosphate in river water and its potential sources in the Upper River Taw catchment, UK.

Steven J Granger1, Tim H E Heaton2, Verena Pfahler3, Martin S A Blackwell3, Huimin Yuan4, Adrian L Collins3.   

Abstract

The need to reduce both point and diffuse phosphorus pollution to aquatic ecosystems is widely recognised and in order to achieve this, identification of the different pollutant sources is essential. Recently, a stable isotope approach using oxygen isotopes within phosphate (δ18OPO4) has been used in phosphorus source tracing studies. This approach was applied in a one-off survey in September 2013 to the River Taw catchment in south-west England where elevated levels of phosphate have been reported. River water δ18OPO4 along the main channel varied little, ranging from +17.1 to +18.8‰. This was no >0.3‰ different to that of the isotopic equilibrium with water (Eδ18OPO4). The δ18OPO4 in the tributaries was more variable (+17.1 to +18.8‰), but only deviated from Eδ18OPO4 by between 0.4 and 0.9‰. Several potential phosphate sources within the catchment were sampled and most had a narrow range of δ18OPO4 values similar to that of river Eδ18OPO4. Discharge from two waste water treatment plants had different and distinct δ18OPO4 from one another ranging between +16.4 and +19.6‰ and similar values to that of a dairy factory final effluent (+16.5 to +17.8‰), mains tap water (+17.8 to +18.4‰), and that of the phosphate extracted from river channel bed sediment (+16.7 to +17.6‰). Inorganic fertilizers had a wide range of values (+13.3 to +25.9‰) while stored animal wastes were consistently lower (+12.0 to +15.0‰) than most other sources and Eδ18OPO4. The distinct signals from the waste water treatment plants were lost within the river over a short distance suggesting that rapid microbial cycling of phosphate was occurring, because microbial cycling shifts the isotopic signal towards Eδ18OPO4. This study has added to the global inventory of phosphate source δ18OPO4 values, but also demonstrated the limitations of this approach to identifying phosphate sources, especially at times when microbial cycling is high.
Copyright © 2016 Office national des forêts. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Animal slurry; Fertilizers; Microbial cycling; Phosphorus; Stable isotopes; Tracing

Year:  2016        PMID: 27697742     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.09.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  6 in total

1.  The stable oxygen isotope ratio of resin extractable phosphate derived from fresh cattle faeces.

Authors:  Steven J Granger; Yuguo Yang; Verena Pfahler; Chris Hodgson; Andrew C Smith; Kate Le Cocq; Adrian L Collins; Martin S A Blackwell; Nicholas J K Howden
Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom       Date:  2018-05-15       Impact factor: 2.419

2.  Improvements in the preparation of phosphate for oxygen isotope analysis from soils and sediments.

Authors:  Zifu Xu; Tao Huang; Xijie Yin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-09-20       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Sediment source fingerprinting: benchmarking recent outputs, remaining challenges and emerging themes.

Authors:  Adrian L Collins; Martin Blackwell; Pascal Boeckx; Charlotte-Anne Chivers; Monica Emelko; Olivier Evrard; Ian Foster; Allen Gellis; Hamid Gholami; Steve Granger; Paul Harris; Arthur J Horowitz; J Patrick Laceby; Nuria Martinez-Carreras; Jean Minella; Lisa Mol; Kazem Nosrati; Simon Pulley; Uldis Silins; Yuri Jacques da Silva; Micheal Stone; Tales Tiecher; Hari Ram Upadhayay; Yusheng Zhang
Journal:  J Soils Sediments       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 3.308

4.  Tackling unintended consequences of grazing livestock farming: Multi-scale assessment of co-benefits and trade-offs for water pollution mitigation scenarios.

Authors:  Yusheng Zhang; Bruce Griffith; Steve Granger; Hadewij Sint; Adrian L Collins
Journal:  J Clean Prod       Date:  2022-02-15       Impact factor: 9.297

5.  Exploring the effects of land management change on productivity, carbon and nutrient balance: Application of an Ensemble Modelling Approach to the upper River Taw observatory, UK.

Authors:  Kirsty L Hassall; Kevin Coleman; Prakash N Dixit; Steve J Granger; Yusheng Zhang; Ryan T Sharp; Lianhai Wu; Andrew P Whitmore; Goetz M Richter; Adrian L Collins; Alice E Milne
Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2022-02-16       Impact factor: 10.753

6.  Analysis of oxygen isotopes of inorganic phosphate (δ18Op) in freshwater: A detailed method description for obtaining oxygen isotopes of inorganic phosphate in environmental water samples.

Authors:  Catharina S Nisbeth; Federica Tamburini; Jacob Kidmose; Søren Jessen; David W O'Connell
Journal:  MethodsX       Date:  2022-04-16
  6 in total

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