The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers

Freshwater ecosystems are increasingly threatened by multiple anthropogenic stressors. Release of treated sewage effluent and pollution from agricultural or urban sources can independently reduce water quality with implications for ecological communities. However, our knowledge of the combined effec...

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Main Authors: Albini, D, Lester, L, Sanders, P, Hughes, J, Jackson, MC
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
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author Albini, D
Lester, L
Sanders, P
Hughes, J
Jackson, MC
author_facet Albini, D
Lester, L
Sanders, P
Hughes, J
Jackson, MC
author_sort Albini, D
collection OXFORD
description Freshwater ecosystems are increasingly threatened by multiple anthropogenic stressors. Release of treated sewage effluent and pollution from agricultural or urban sources can independently reduce water quality with implications for ecological communities. However, our knowledge of the combined effects of these stressors is limited. We performed a field study to quantify the combined effect of treated sewage discharge and land use on nutrient concentrations, sewage fungus presence and communities of macroinvertebrates and benthic algae. Over three seasons in four rivers we found that a model which included an interaction between sewage pollution and time of the year (i.e. months) was the best predictor of nutrient concentrations and the abundance of algae and sewage fungus. Both macroinvertebrate and algae communities shifted downstream of sewage input. Specifically, more tolerant groups, such as cyanobacteria and oligochaetes, were more abundant. The EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Tricoptera) water quality score was best explained by an interaction between month and agriculture in the surrounding landscape. Overall, our results show that sewage discharge has a significant impact on water quality and benthic riverine communities, regardless of the surrounding land uses. Agricultural inputs, however, could be more important than treated sewage discharge in reducing the abundance of sensitive invertebrate taxa. We need both improvements to wastewater treatment processes and reductions in agricultural pollution to reduce threats to vulnerable freshwater communities.
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spelling oxford-uuid:06cff4f4-9906-415f-b1c0-3c9e9afbaade2024-02-20T12:22:12ZThe combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on riversJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:06cff4f4-9906-415f-b1c0-3c9e9afbaadeEnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2023Albini, DLester, LSanders, PHughes, JJackson, MCFreshwater ecosystems are increasingly threatened by multiple anthropogenic stressors. Release of treated sewage effluent and pollution from agricultural or urban sources can independently reduce water quality with implications for ecological communities. However, our knowledge of the combined effects of these stressors is limited. We performed a field study to quantify the combined effect of treated sewage discharge and land use on nutrient concentrations, sewage fungus presence and communities of macroinvertebrates and benthic algae. Over three seasons in four rivers we found that a model which included an interaction between sewage pollution and time of the year (i.e. months) was the best predictor of nutrient concentrations and the abundance of algae and sewage fungus. Both macroinvertebrate and algae communities shifted downstream of sewage input. Specifically, more tolerant groups, such as cyanobacteria and oligochaetes, were more abundant. The EPT (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Tricoptera) water quality score was best explained by an interaction between month and agriculture in the surrounding landscape. Overall, our results show that sewage discharge has a significant impact on water quality and benthic riverine communities, regardless of the surrounding land uses. Agricultural inputs, however, could be more important than treated sewage discharge in reducing the abundance of sensitive invertebrate taxa. We need both improvements to wastewater treatment processes and reductions in agricultural pollution to reduce threats to vulnerable freshwater communities.
spellingShingle Albini, D
Lester, L
Sanders, P
Hughes, J
Jackson, MC
The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title_full The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title_fullStr The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title_full_unstemmed The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title_short The combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
title_sort combined effects of treated sewage discharge and land use on rivers
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