| Literature DB >> 31427837 |
Sujay S Kaushal1, Arthur J Gold2, Susana Bernal3, Tammy A Newcomer Johnson4, Kelly Addy2, Amy Burgin5, Douglas A Burns6, Ashley A Coble7, Eran Hood8, Yuehan Lu9, Paul Mayer10, Elizabeth C Minor11, Andrew W Schroth12, Philippe Vidon13, Henry Wilson14, Marguerite A Xenopoulos15, Thomas Doody1, Joseph Galella1, Phillip Goodling1, Katherine Haviland16, Shahan Haq1, Barret Wessel17, Kelsey Wood1, Norbert Jaworski18, Kenneth T Belt19.
Abstract
In the Anthropocene1, watershed chemical transport is increasingly dominated by novel combinations elements, which are hydrologically linked together as 'chemical cocktails.' Chemical cocktails are novel because human activities greatly enhance elemental concentrations and their probability for biogeochemical interactions and shared transport along hydrologic flowpaths. A new chemical cocktail approach advances our ability to: trace contaminant mixtures in watersheds, develop chemical proxies with high-resolution sensor data, and manage multiple water quality problems. We explore the following questions: (1) Can we classify elemental transport in watersheds as chemical cocktails using a new approach? (2) What is the role of climate and land use in enhancing the formation and transport of chemical cocktails in watersheds? To address these questions, we first analyze trends in concentrations of carbon, nutrients, metals, and salts in fresh waters over 100 years. Next, we explore how climate and land use enhance the probability of formation of chemical cocktails of carbon, nutrients, metals, and salts. Ultimately, we classify transport of chemical cocktails based on solubility, mobility, reactivity, and dominant phases: (1) sieved chemical cocktails (e.g., particulate forms of nutrients, metals and organic matter); (2) filtered chemical cocktails (e.g., dissolved organic matter and associated metal complexes); (3) chromatographic chemical cocktails (e.g., ions eluted from soil exchange sites); and (4) reactive chemical cocktails (e.g., limiting nutrients and redox sensitive elements). Typically, contaminants are regulated and managed one element at a time, even though combinations of elements interact to influence many water-quality problems such as toxicity to life, eutrophication, infrastructure and water treatment. A chemical cocktail approach significantly expands evaluations of water-quality signatures and impacts beyond single elements to mixtures. High-frequency sensor data (pH, specific conductance, turbidity, etc.) can serve as proxies for chemical cocktails and improve real-time analyses of water-quality violations, identify regulatory needs, and track water quality recovery following and extreme climate events. Ultimately, a watershed chemical cocktail approach is necessary for effectively co-managing groups of contaminants and provides a more holistic approach for studying, monitoring, and managing water quality in the Anthropocene.Entities:
Keywords: acidification; cations; droughts; eutrophication; floods; hypoxia; metals; nutrients; organic contaminants; salinization; salts; storms
Year: 2018 PMID: 31427837 PMCID: PMC6699637 DOI: 10.1007/s10533-018-0502-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biogeochemistry ISSN: 0168-2563 Impact factor: 4.825