Item

Dynamics of phosphorus exchange between sediment and water in a gravel-bed river

Wilcock, RJ
McDowell, Richard
Quinn, JM
Rutherford, JC
Young, RG
Depree, CV
Date
2020
Type
Journal Article
Fields of Research
ANZSRC::050209 Natural Resource Management , ANZSRC::050205 Environmental Management , ANZSRC::060204 Freshwater Ecology , ANZSRC::31 Biological sciences , ANZSRC::37 Earth sciences , ANZSRC::41 Environmental sciences
Abstract
Phosphorus (P) stores in gravel-bed rivers are released for uptake by periphyton when pH levels exceed 8.5. The Tukituki River has low alkalinity water and frequently experiences periphyton blooms, and daytime pH > 9 during summer low-flows. We measured dissolved reactive P (DRP) and EPC₀, the water concentration of DRP at which no net release or sorption from the river bed occurs, in sediment samples from the Tukituki River subject to controlled pH levels before (2014) and after (2017) changes to two wastewater discharges that reduced P release to the river by 95%. DRP released from 2014 sediments at pH 8.5–10 were 30 ± 10 mg/m³ above background (pH 8) whereas those released from 2017 sediments were 5 ± 3 mg/m³ above background. EPC₀ levels in 2014 and 2017 were 11 ± 6 and 7 ± 2 mg/m³, respectively. Field estimates of released DRP calculated from continuous pH and the Redfield equation suggested that most of the readily available DRP released from sediments at elevated pH is derived from material attached to recently deposited sediment. Subsequently, a reduction in wastewater inputs or agricultural runoff should reduce sediment DRP stores, and hence sediment fluxes, within a few years and mitigate periphyton blooms in addition to directly lowering water column concentrations.
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© 2020 The Royal Society of New Zealand.
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