Publication | Open Access
Self‐purification of small freshwater streams: Phosphate, Nitrate, and Ammonia removal
78
Citations
4
References
1974
Year
BiogeochemistryEutrophicationEngineeringLimnologyWater ResourcesEnvironmental EngineeringAmmonia RemovalSediment-water InteractionWater PurificationNutrient CycleWater TreatmentWater QualityNutrient StoichiometryStream BedNutrient LoadingStream NutrientsWastewater TreatmentWater Technology
Abstract Uptake of stream nutrients by organisms or sediments of the stream bed is affected by the nutrient loading to which the stream is accustomed. In a stream with nutrient‐poor waters, added phosphate and ammonia were removed rapidly and efficiently at water temperatures within the range 4.5–15.0°c on passing over a mat of filamentous algae and trapped sediment. Nitrate was removed less efficiently or not at all. In another stream where nutrients were abundant, phosphate and nitrate from a sewage outfall were not significantly removed by the stream bed flora up to 100 m downstream at summer temperatures. Sodium was used as an inert marker to measure the dilution of added nutrients or sewage effluent by the stream waters; electrical conductivity was rejected as a measure because it is influenced by photosynthesis. Studies of nutrient run‐off should take account of stream‐bed removal when the effects of run‐off on eutrophication of lakes are being considered.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1