Subscriber access provided by UNIV OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO LIBRARIES
Article
Internal loading and redox cycling of sediment iron explain reactive phosphorus concentrations in lowland rivers Erik Smolders, Evert Baetens, Mieke Verbeeck, Sophie Nawara, Jan Diels, Martin Verdievel, Bob Peeters, Ward De Cooman, and Stijn Baken Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b04337 • Publication Date (Web): 24 Jan 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 25, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
Internal loading and redox cycling of sediment iron explain reactive phosphorus concentrations in lowland rivers Erik Smolders†*, Evert Baetens†, Mieke Verbeeck†, Sophie Nawara†, Jan Diels†, Martin Verdievel$, Bob Peeters$, Ward De Cooman$ and Stijn Baken$$
†
Division Soil and Water Management, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 20, B-3001
Leuven, Belgium $
Flanders Environment Agency VMM, Dokter De Moorstraat 24-26, B-9300 Aalst, Belgium
$$
European Copper Institute, Avenue de Tervuren 168 b-10, B-1150 Brussels
* Corresponding author e-mail:
[email protected] Tel: +32 16 321761 Fax: +32 16 321997
1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 2 of 31
1
ABSTRACT
2
The phosphate quality standards in the lowland rivers of Flanders (northern Belgium) are
3
exceeded in over 80% of the sampling sites. The factors affecting the molybdate reactive P
4
(MRP) in these waters were analyzed using the data of the last decade (>200,000
5
observations). The average MRP concentrations in summer exceed those in winter by factor 3.
6
This seasonal trend is opposite to that of the dissolved oxygen (DO) and nitrate
7
concentrations. The negative correlations between MRP and DO is marked (r=-0.89). The
8
MRP concentrations are geographically unrelated to erosion sensitive areas, to point-source P-
9
emissions or to riverbed sediment P concentration. Instead, MRP concentrations significantly
10
increase with increasing sediment P/Fe concentration ratio (p 15, further converted here to
49
P/Fe molar ratio 10 years
6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 7 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
94
EXPERIMENTAL
95
Monitoring data
96
The study site is the Flemish region of Belgium. The hydrology of this region is described
97
elsewhere18-20. Briefly, the region (13,600 km2) is drained to the North Sea by the catchments
98
of the Scheldt river (71%), the Meuse river (12%), the Yser river (10%) and the area of
99
Brugse polders drained by canals (7%). Major sub catchments include the Lower Scheldt
100
basin, the Demer basin and the Nete basin. Flanders has a mainly flat topography, with
101
increasing elevation in the southern part, up to 156 m above sea level. The NE part of
102
Flanders is characterized by sandy soils, the W part consists of sandy, loamy sand and clay
103
soils, while the south of Flanders has loamy soils, which can be highly sensitive to erosion
104
due to combination with slopes up to 5-10%. About 75% of surface water discharge in
105
Flanders is attributed to baseflow with a minor part being surface runoff and interflow19. The
106
Nete and Demer basins (NE Flanders) are characterised by Fe(II)-rich groundwater, with
107
average 20 mg Fe (II) L-1
108
rivers in these catchments results in rapid oxidation and precipitation of ferrihydrite,
109
contributing extensively to the authigenic sediment load of these rivers.
110
The dataset of the freshwater physicochemical monitoring network of the Flanders
111
Environment Agency VMM was consulted for the sampling period January 2003-November
112
2015. It has 3534 sampling sites distributed over Flanders and includes navigable and non-
113
navigable rivers, ditches and a small fraction (0.9%) of lentic systems. Since 2003, the
114
network had been expanded with specific points almost exclusively affected by agricultural
115
activities under the Flemish Manure Action Plan (termed ‘MAP points’). The sampling
116
procedures and water analysis use a compendium21. Briefly, grab water samples are collected
14
. Seepage of this groundwater in the mainly groundwater-fed
7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 8 of 31
117
under random hydrological conditions ca. 30 cm under the water surface. The sampling
118
periodicity varied but the number of samples per month was fairly constant over the entire
119
period, the MRP data were available for, on average, 40% of all sample points each month.
120
Water temperature, O2, pH, and electrical conductivity (EC) are measured on the spot and
121
samples collected for other analyses stored cold. Total P (TP) is measured mainly with ICP
122
(Inductively Coupled Plasma) on unfiltered but acidified (pH 1-2) samples. The compendium
123
prescribes that orthophosphate (oPO4) is determined with the molybdate blue method
124
following an ISO guideline22. It is well established that the acid colorimetric methods for P
125
include colloidal P
126
colloidal PO4. Here, we prefer the operationally defined term molybdate reactive P (MRP).
127
The detection limits (DL) for MRP varied in the database between 0.005 and 0.025 mg P L-1
128
for MRP and MRP data of samples < DL was replaced by half of the corresponding limit
129
(10% of data). For TP, this involved 15% of data.
130
Data of P, Fe and Al of the freshwater sediment database of the Flemish Environment Agency
131
were collated. The Flemish Environment Agency has a network of 300 sediment sampling
132
sites that are sampled once every four years. The sediments are collected with a 2 L Van Veen
133
sampler to about 20 cm depth. The sediment analysis is made in aqua regia extracts.
134
Data was queried by the statistical program R (Version 3.2.0; R core team, 2015). The most
135
important packages used in R were timeDate (Rmetrics Core Team et al., 2015), chron and
136
lubridate. Maps were made with the open source QGIS software (version 2.10.1-Pisa). Maps
137
with ordinary kriging of MRP and sediment Fe and P data were made with SAGA GIS 2.0.
138
Variograms were made in SAS (SAS institute, 2011) using the variogram function for the log
139
transformed data. For MRP, the best fit was with a nested spherical model whereas for Fe and
140
P it was a spherical model. All of the map layers used here were obtained from the website of
23
, hence the term oPO4 is misleading since the method also includes
8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
141
the Agency of Geographical Information Flanders24. The Flemish Hydrographical Atlas
142
(version 01/09/2015) contained map layers for the Flemish water streams and
143
(sub)catchments. The erosion sensitivity map of the Flemish water test (‘Watertoets’) was
144
also used, more specifically the version of 20/07/2006. Lastly the Flemish digital elevation
145
model (DEM; resolution of 100x100m) was downloaded as background layer.
146
Sediment-water incubation study
147
The P-mobilization from sediments to waters was studied in laboratory conditions to separate
148
out effects of temperature, DO and sediment properties. Five sediments were collected in
149
Flanders in February 2016, i.e. in mid-winter season (Table S 1). The sediments were
150
collected from small rivers in an agricultural grassland area except the sample Bierbeek which
151
was in a grassland at 250 m downstream of a wastewater treatment plant. Some surface water
152
was included in the sediment holding container and all sediment samples were stored
153
submerged in that water at 4°C for maximally 15 days pending wet sieving (10 mm); a
154
subsample was oven-dried (70°C) and analyzed for Fe, Al and P with acid oxalate extract
155
and pH. The sediment-water incubation study was performed with these five wet sediments at
156
20° C or 4° C with or without aeration, each treatment duplicated in a complete factorial
157
design (n=40). About 300 mL water saturated sediments were gently poured into 1.1 L
158
polypropylene pots (diameter 9.5 cm) followed by the addition of 700 mL (about 7 cm height)
159
CaCl2 10-3M that had been deoxygenated by 24 h bubbling with N2 gas . The pots were
160
installed in controlled temperature rooms (±1°C) with open top, aerated treatments used
161
hobby aquarium pumps injecting air at 3 cm from the water surface through 0.2 mL pipette
162
tips. After 7, 14 and 21 days, a solution sample was collected at 1 cm above the sediment
163
surface, 0.45 µm filtered and analysed for MRP26 within 32 h; a second filtered subsample
164
was acidified pending analysis for total dissolved elements by ICP-MS (Agilent 7700x). The
25
9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 31
165
solution pH was measured at 3 cm above the sediment surface and the DO profile was
166
measured at 0.2-cm intervals from the top down to the sediment-water interface with a O2
167
micro sensor (tip diameter 100 µm; Unisense, Denmark) mounted on a motor-driven micro
168
manipulator.
169
10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
170
RESULTS
171
Monitoring data
172
The Flemish surface water can be categorized as hard (1-3 mM Ca) and pH neutral (pH 7-8;
173
Table 1). About half of the sediment samples contain >1000 mg P kg-1, indicating the legacy
174
P of past emission. The environmental quality criteria of oPO4 (here: MRP) in the Flemish
175
region range 0.07-0.14 mg P L-1, varying with stream characteristics. The analysis of the 2014
176
MRP data arranged by stream characteristics and location reveal that 82% of the sampling
177
sites exceeded the corresponding limit. The average of the >200,000 MRP observations is
178
0.49 mg P L-1.
179
The MRP data sorted by month exhibit a clear seasonal trend (Figure S 1a) with summer
180
values (July-September) exceeding winter (January-March) values by factors 1.9 (median),
181
2.8 (average) and 3.6 (P90). The MRP distribution is more right-skewed in summer than in
182
winter. The seasonal MRP trend coincides with the inverse of the seasonal DO trend, whereas
183
the seasonal water temperature trend slightly precedes these by 1-2 months (Figure 1). The
184
averages of MRP were calculated for each month 2003-2015 for the entire region (n=152) and
185
these averages (log transformed) correlated more strongly with corresponding DO (r=-0.89)
186
than with temperature (r=0.81; Figure S 2). The summer increases in MRP are associated with
187
increased electrical conductivity and TP but none of both increase to the same extent as MRP.
188
Trends in nitrate concentrations are opposite to those of phosphate (MRP or TP; Figure S 1c)
189
with peaks in winter months, about 6 month after MRP peaks.
190
The MRP fluctuations were further analyzed per sampling site: the averages of MRP in
191
summer months (July-Sept., all years) were divided by corresponding winter months averages
192
(Jan-March). Sampling sites for which n 40% 11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 31
193
of the mean were excluded. The summer-winter MRP ratios exceed 10 at some points and are
194
positively related to the summer MRP, but unrelated to winter MRP concentrations (Figure S
195
3), i.e. sampling sites where large concentrations are found in summer are characterized by a
196
large MRP seasonality. The long-term average MRP concentrations are smallest in NE
197
Flanders (Figure 2) where summer-winter MRP ratios are also smallest (Figure S 4). The
198
summer-winter MRP ratios are geographically unrelated to erosion sensitive areas (Figure S
199
4). Largest average concentrations are found in western Flanders where the summer-winter
200
ratios are large (Figures 2 and S 4). Along the coastline in western Flanders, summer-winter
201
MRP are smaller whereas average MRP are large in contrast with the general trend. This may
202
be explained by the groundwater P, which is markedly elevated near the coastline (not
203
shown), similar as found The Netherlands27.
204
The geographical distribution of long-term MRP data has a pronounced W-E gradient (Figure
205
2) which unlikely relates to that of P emissions. The household point emissions of P (2011
206
data28 are largest in the most densely populated center of the Flemish region (Figure S 5,
207
bottom). The livestock density is largest in western Flanders, however MRP is unlikely
208
proportional to livestock density: the current (201329) animal manure production (area based
209
values) is about 1.9-fold larger in the western West Flanders province than in the north-
210
eastern Province of Antwerpen whereas the long-term average MRP concentrations differ
211
factor 3.1 (0.88 versus 0.28 mg P L-1) and agricultural emissions are not dominating the total
212
P emissions28. Livestock does typically not directly interact with the surface water. The
213
sediment P concentrations, used as an index of historical and current P emissions, are
214
geographically also unrelated to MRP (Figure S 5, top). In contrast, the average MRP
215
concentrations are lower where sediment Fe is large (Figure 2). A statistical approach was
216
taken to underpin these spatial associations: the MRP and sediment data were combined by 12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
217
dividing the database in 98 subcatchments and calculating subcatchment average values. This
218
analysis reveals no relationship between MRP and sediment P (Figure 3) but a statistically
219
significant decrease of the average MRP with increasing sediment Fe, both expressed as log
220
transformed values (p= 0.014; R=0.06, Figure S 6). The MRP correlates even stronger (and
221
positively) with increasing sediment P/Fe ratio (p=0.0006 in winter and p=0.0013 in summer),
222
the slope being steeper in summer than in winter (Figure 3). The subcatchments were divided
223
according to molar P/Fe ratio using the cutoff of 0.12 (molar based), a value previously
224
reported as threshold below which the P mobilization was less likely6. The seasonality of
225
MRP is lower in subcatchments with low sediment P/Fe, whereas the reverse is true in
226
subcatchments with high sediment P/Fe (Figure 4). Finally, summer MRP concentrations are
227
larger in small waterways than in larger (navigable) waterways whereas corresponding winter
228
values do not show that trend (Figure S 3). The seasonality effects on MRP concentration are
229
found in both the MAP sampling sites (mainly agriculturally affected) as the non-MAP
230
sampling sites (Figure S 3).
231
Sediment-water incubation study
232
Two sediments with high Fe, but low P; were collected from NE Belgium where the MRP
233
concentrations are low; two other sediments with higher P/Fe were collected from western
234
Flanders where the MRP concentrations and ratios are large; the fifth sediment was collected
235
as an intermediate between both contrasting regions (Table S 1 and Figure 2 for location).
236
The surface forced bubbling with air (aeration) did not visually induce stirring but was
237
sufficient to ensure saturated DO down to the sediment surface (>8 mg O2 L-1, with one
238
exception; Table S 2). The DO in the water layer above the non-aerated sediments readily
239
decreased with depth, effects being small in one sediment (Figure S 7). The MRP increased
240
from below detection limit in the original synthetic contact solution to values > 1 mg P L-1 in 13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 14 of 31
241
the non-aerated treatments of the two sediments with highest P/Fe ratio. No such P release
242
was found for the low P/Fe sediments or for any aerated treatment (Figure 3; Table S 2). A
243
small experiment (See supporting information: annex 1 and Table S3) including an additional
244
third treatment with N2 bubbling, showed also much larger MRP in the N2 gas bubbled
245
samples than in air bubbled treatments and that the effects of the aeration on reducing MRP
246
shown in Figure 3 are not related to dilution induced by mixing via gas bubbles. In the main
247
experiment, MRP was negatively related to DO (Figure 5) but, again, only in sediments with
248
high (>0.12) molar P/Fe ratio. The sediment P concentrations were unrelated to the MRP
249
(Figure 3). The total dissolved P (TDP) release was parallel to the release of Fe for the high
250
P/Fe sediments with a mean molar ratio (0.3) close to that of the sediment P/Fe (~0.4; Figure
251
5). In sharp contrast, the pronounced mobilisation of up to 1 mM Fe in sediment Retie (high
252
Fe but P/Fe= 0.04) did not coincide with such a release of TDP. The reddish colour noted at
253
the sediment:water interface was most pronounced in that high Fe sediment Retie suggesting
254
that any mobilized P was again sequestered at the sediment-water interface by oxidizing Fe,
255
which was present in large excess. Increasing temperature in the non-aerated treatment
256
decreased MRP and TDP release from the high P/Fe sediments, especially at prolonged
257
incubation (e.g. 21 days). The TDP concentrations were slightly above MRP concentrations
258
(median: factor 1.05) but there were a few cases where TDP well exceeded MRP. In contrast
259
to samples for TDP, those for MRP were not acidified prior to analysis to mimic the standard
260
protocol in the field monitoring. The Fe2+ oxidises quickly in pH neutral water, thereby
261
forming a precipitate at the bottom of the samples vial sequestering some P. In aerated
262
treatments, effects of temperature on TDP and MRP were small and inconsistent. The highly
263
significant temperature effect on MRP in all data collated (Table S 2) is a negative one, i.e.
264
increasing temperature decreased MRP, largely influenced by the non-aerated high P/Fe 14
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
265
sediment treatments. The solution pH values were, on average, 0.6 pH units lower in the non-
266
aerated than in aerated treatments, likely due to the accelerated degassing of carbonic acid by
267
the forced aeration.
268
DISCUSSION
269
The MRP concentration in the lowland rivers of Flanders are probably among the largest in
270
Europe. With a general average of 0.5 mg MRP L-1 it exceeds corresponding values in other
271
EU countries by over factor 5, excluding U.K and The Netherlands for which, older (2004)
272
and limited, MRP mean values are estimated 0.3-0.1 mg P L-1 respectively 15. The European
273
Environmental Agency has no recent comparative collation of MRP data but older data
274
suggest that Polish freshwaters may also contain similar MRP concentration as those in the
275
Flemish region.
276
Several lines of evidence appear from this study to propose that the temporal and spatial
277
variability of MRP in the water layer in lowland rivers of Flanders is mainly related to
278
internal loading, i.e. to the legacy P in the sediment and not to the corresponding variability in
279
emission and dilution. First, the seasonality of MRP is almost reverse to that of nitrate, the
280
latter is an index of highly mobile fertilizer emissions suggesting that non-point agricultural
281
emissions are not affecting the seasonality of MRP. Second, the seasonality is unlikely a mere
282
dilution effect since conductivity responds clearly less to seasonality than MRP. Third, in
283
contrast with the common paradigm in soil science
284
sources of MRP for the entire region since erosion-sensitive soils are mainly limited to the
285
loamy belt of Flanders where MRP and its seasonal changes are average to even low (Figures
286
2 and S 4). Fourth and final, the relationships between MRP, DO and sediment P/Fe, both in
287
the field as in the laboratory incubations point to anoxic processes releasing P from the
30
erosion processes are unlikely major
15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
288
sediment. This occurred even in pH neutral sediments and hard waters. The anoxia as a
289
causality rather than temperature is supported by the delayed response of MRP to water
290
temperature in the field (Figure 1), the stronger association between MRP and DO than
291
between MRP and temperature (Figure S 2) and the even negative effect of temperature on
292
MRP in the incubation experiment (Table S 2).
293
Internal loading explains the spatial and temporal trends in MRP in this monitoring network.
294
This does not mean that internal loading is currently the major net source of P in this network.
295
A nutrient budget study of the Scheldt basin between 1950-2000 suggests that the sediments
296
in Flanders have clearly acted as a net sink (net retention) for P during that period17. Current
297
emissions of P have reduced from historical ones. The Flemish Environment Agency
298
estimated the point and diffuse annual P emissions in 2011 as 2600 ton P, with about 1450 ton
299
P due to point emissions 28. The annual total water discharge towards the North Sea is 4×109
300
m3 year-1
301
m3)-1 or 0.65 mg P L-1. This value is of similar magnitude as the 2010-2011 averages of MRP
302
(0.47 mg P L-1) and TP (0.77 mg P L-1). Despite uncertainties in the accuracy of diffuse
303
emissions, such budget estimate suggests a near steady state in the average sediment-water
304
exchanges of P, however with pronounced spatial and seasonal variability in the role of
305
sediments as either source or sink in the entire network. Clearly, current P emissions are
306
considerable in Flanders, and historical emissions were even larger. But redox processes
307
likely determine where and when this P accumulates in the sediment or where/when a net
308
release from it occurs.
19
. A mere dilution of the emissions in that discharge predicts 2600 ton P (4×109
309 310
The lack of elevated MRP in NE Flanders despite high sediment and groundwater P repeats
311
our earlier finding that this particular catchments (Nete and Demer) have low P/Fe ratios in 16
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 31
Page 17 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
312
the groundwater (0.03 mol P (mol Fe)-1) and stream bed through which most of the MRP is
313
fixed to ferric iron in all seasons13,
314
sediments6 qualitatively appears valid to discriminate the high MRP from low MRP releasing
315
river sediments in the laboratory and in the field. However, considerable variation remains in
316
the field data (Figure 3). Some of that variability might be related to variability in Fe
317
mineralogy in the sediments. The aqua regia extract used in the sediment monitoring network
318
is non selective, it extracts also Fe(II) sulphides and non-reducible, crystalline Fe oxides that
319
are not involved in P mobilization. Potentially a more Fe(III) selective extract, extracting both
320
the reducible Fe and the minerals that sequester P might be a more robust indicator of the
321
release of MRP. One candidate may be
322
characterizing the sediments of the incubation experiment and for characterizing P release
323
from drainage ditches13,. The release of Fe and P with a molar P/Fe ratio of 0.3 strikingly
324
corresponds with the P/Fe ratio in the oxalate extract of the corresponding two sediments, i.e.
325
0.4 (Figure 5). This suggests that the oxalate extractable Fe is the main phase to which P is
326
sorbed for these two sediments. Stoichiometric calculation show that oxalate extractable Fe
327
represents about 80% or more of the Fe+Al sorption capacity and that respiration may be
328
sufficient to completely deplete the oxalate extractable Fe, thereby releasing MRP
329
(Supporting Information, Annex 2). That calculation also suggest that the lack of P release
330
from the high Fe sediments Retie and Vorselaar is likely related to the excess ferric Fe that
331
cannot be reduced to sufficiently deplete ferric iron holding P. The two sediments with high
332
P/Fe ratio were collected in a pH neutral area and the air-dried sediments are indeed pH
333
neutral. It is commonly stated that P mobility in pH neutral, well fertilized soils and sediments
334
are controlled by Ca-phosphates, however we recently showed that Fe and Al oxyhydroxides
335
explain P mobility in such soils as good as in the more acid sandy soils (re-analysis of recent
14
. The P/Fe threshold derived previously for lake
the acid oxalate extract that was used for
17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 18 of 31
336
soil leaching data 31, details not shown), supporting our hypothesis that the oxalate extractable
337
Fe is the main phase to which P is sorbed for these two sediments and that Fe reduction is the
338
source of MRP release under anoxic condition. The effects of increasing temperature on MRP
339
is a negative one and might be explained by the surface oxidation of ferrous iron with traces
340
of oxygen which is faster at high than at low temperature, thereby depleting MRP and Fe at
341
prolonged incubation. Indeed, dynamics of MRP and Fe in the non-aerated treatments at the
342
20°C is characterized by a release followed by depletion of Fe and MRP, in contrast with that
343
at 4°C where the release is more constant (Table S 2).
344
The monitoring network used here is not designed to identify discharge effects on the water
345
quality parameters. On subsets of the data, we related MRP in relation to rain events and
346
found that peaks in MRP occurred after rain events in summer in an area with flat topography
347
(details not shown). Since erosion and run-off is unlikely in that area and season, such peaks
348
may be related to combined sewer overflow events or, related to that, to anoxia following
349
such discharges. Sewer overflows are active in 1.8% of their time in Flanders (2015 data).
350
These peaks logically affect the upper percentile and summer-winter ratios and require further
351
study in relation to DO trends.
352
Zwolsman
353
“anoxic waters in the low salinity zone during spring and summer makes the behavior of P
354
more complex” and predicted that the measures to restore DO will render summer dissolved P
355
“to resemble winter profiles…but the natural P buffering with retard the improvement in
356
water quality”. Taken together, the weight of evidence of our study is in line with that
357
interpretation. Internal loading likely dominates the seasonal and spatial variation in MRP
358
concentrations in surface waters. As estimated above, the sediment-water exchange of
359
phosphorus is close to a steady state for the annual average of the entire region, hence
12
concluded after several cruises on the Scheldt Estuary almost 30 years ago that
18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 19 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
360
sustained efforts will be needed to further reduce emissions. Our results indicate that this is
361
best accompanied by measures to avoid episodes of low DO levels in summer that lead to
362
peak MRP concentrations due to redox cycling of Fe., e.g. by further reducing the biological
363
oxygen demand in effluents. Managing MRP concentrations in water may be more
364
importantly affected by redox cycling of Fe, and hence by dissolved oxygen, than by current
365
emissions.
366 367
19
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 31
368
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
369
Supporting Information
370
Supporting information contains additional graphs, maps and tables of the monitoring data
371
and the experiments with associated details of the methodologies where required. This
372
material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
373 374
AUTHOR INFORMATION
375
Corresponding Author
376
*
377
Author Contributions
378
This paper was written through contributions of all authors. all authors have given approval to
379
the final version of this manuscript.
380
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
E-mail:
[email protected] (Erik Smolders)
381 382 383
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
384
Thanks to the P-team of KU Leuven: Jessica, Ruben, Kris, Charlotte, Claudia and Daniella for
385
discussions. Bart Kerré, Kristin Coorevits and Karla Moors are thanked for practical help.
386
20
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
REFERENCES 1.
Bjerrum, C. J.; Canfield, D. E., Ocean productivity before about 1.9 Gyr ago limited
by phosphorus adsorption onto iron oxides. Nature 2002, 417, (6885), 159-162. 2.
Davison, W., Iron and manganese in lakes. Earth-Sci. Rev. 1993, 34, (2), 119-163.
3.
Golterman, H. L., Phosphate release from anoxic sediments or 'What did Mortimer
really write?'. Hydrobiologia 2001, 450, (1-3), 99-106. 4.
Hupfer, M.; Lewandowski, J., Oxygen Controls the Phosphorus Release from Lake
Sediments - a Long-Lasting Paradigm in Limnology. Int. Rev. Hydrobiol. 2008, 93, (4-5), 415-432. 5.
Gachter, R.; Meyer, J. S., The role of microorganisms in mobilization and fixation of
phosphorus in sediments. Hydrobiologia 1993, 253, (1-3), 103-121. 6.
Jensen, H. S.; Kristensen, P.; Jeppesen, E.; Skytthe, A., Iron-phosphorus ratio in
surface sediment as an indicator of phosphate release from aerobic sediments in shallow lakes. Hydrobiologia 1992, 235, 731-743. 7.
Chen, M.; Ye, T. R.; Krumholz, L. R.; Jiang, H. L., Temperature and Cyanobacterial
Bloom Biomass Influence Phosphorous Cycling in Eutrophic Lake Sediments. PLoS One
2014, 9, (3). 8.
Sondergaard, M.; Jensen, J. P.; Jeppesen, E., Role of sediment and internal loading of
phosphorus in shallow lakes. Hydrobiologia 2003, 506, (1-3), 135-145. 9.
Bowes, M. J.; House, W. A.; Hodgkinson, R. A., Phosphorus dynamics along a river
continuum. Sci. Total Environ. 2003, 313, (1-3), 199-212.
21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
10.
Page 22 of 31
Schulz, M.; Bischoff, M., Variation in riverine phosphorus between 1994 and 2003 as
affected by land-use and loading reductions in six medium-sized to large German rivers.
Limnologica 2008, 38, (2), 126-138. 11.
Banaszuk, P.; Wysocka-Czubaszek, A., Phosphorus dynamics and fluxes in a lowland
river: The Narew anastomosing river system, NE Poland. Ecol. Eng. 2005, 25, (4), 429-441. 12.
Zwolsman, J. J. G., Seasonal variability and biogeochemistry of phosphorus in the
Scheldt estuary, south-west Netherlands. Estuar. Coast. Shelf S. 1994, 39, (3), 227-248. 13.
Baken, S.; Verbeeck, M.; Verheyen, D.; Diels, J.; Smolders, E., Phosphorus losses
from agricultural land to natural waters are reduced by immobilization in iron-rich sediments of drainage ditches. Water Res. 2015, 71, 160-170. 14.
Baken, S.; Salaets, P.; Desmet, N.; Seuntjens, P.; Vanlierde, E.; Smolders, E.,
Oxidation of Iron Causes Removal of Phosphorus and Arsenic from Streamwater in Groundwater-Fed Lowland Catchments. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2015, 49, (5), 2886-2894. 15.
Foy, R. H., Variation in the reactive phosphorus concentrations in rivers of northwest
Europe with respect to their potential to cause eutrophication. Soil Use Manage. 2007, 23, 195-204. 16.
European Environmental Agency Present concentrations of phosphorus in rivers and
lakes
in
European
countries.
http://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/figures/present-
concentration-of-phosphorus-in-rivers-left-ortophosphate-and-lakes-right-total-phosphorus-ineuropean-countries (April 4, 2016),
17.
Billen, G.; Garnier, J.; Rousseau, V., Nutrient fluxes and water quality in the drainage
network of the Scheldt basin over the last 50 years. Hydrobiologia 2005, 540, 47-67.
22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
18.
Kellens, W.; Vanneuville, W.; Verfaillie, E.; Meire, E.; Deckers, P.; De Maeyer, P.,
Flood Risk Management in Flanders: Past Developments and Future Challenges. Water
Resour. Manag. 2013, 27, (10), 3585-3606. 19.
Zomlot, Z.; Verbeiren, B.; M, H.; Batelaana, O., Spatial distribution of groundwater
recharge and base flow:Assessment of controlling factors. J. Hydr.: Reg. Stud. 2015, 4, 349– 368. 20.
Poelmans, L.; Van Rompaey, A.; Batelaan, O., Coupling urban expansion models and
hydrological models: How important are spatial patterns? Land Use Policy 2010, 27, (3), 965975. 21.
Vlaams Gewest Compendium voor analyse van water versie 08/01/2014.
emis.vito.be/nl/wac-2014 22.
ISO 15681-2: 2003 Water quality - Determination of orthophosphate and total
phosphorus by flow analysis (FIA and CFA) - Part 2: Method by continuous flow analysis (CFA). International Organization for Standardization: Geneva, Switzerland, 2003. 23.
Van Moorleghem, C.; Six, L.; Degryse, F.; Smolders, E.; Merckx, R., Effect of
Organic P Forms and P Present in Inorganic Colloids on the Determination of Dissolved P in Environmental Samples by the Diffusive Gradient in Thin Films Technique, Ion Chromatography, and Colorimetry. Anal. Chem. 2011, 83, (13), 5317-5323. 24.
AGIV Online Catalogus, Agentschap voor Geografische Informatie Vlaanderen.
https://download.agiv.be/Catalogus (September 29, 2015), 25.
Schwertmann, U., The differentiation of iron oxides in soils by extraction with
ammonium oxalate solution. Z. Pflanz. Bodenkunde 1964, 105, 194-202. 26.
Murphy, J.; Riley, J., A modified single solution method for the determination of
phosphate in natural waters. Anal. Chim. Acta 1962, 27, 31-36. 23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
27.
Page 24 of 31
Schoumans, O. F.; Chardon, W. J., Phosphate saturation degree and accumulation of
phosphate in various soil types in The Netherlands. Geoderma 2015, 237, 325-335. 28.
VMM
Emissies
naar
oppervlaktewater.
http://www.milieurapport.be/?PageID=794&Culture=nl (April 13, 2016),
29.
VLM
Voortgangsrapport
mestbank
2014
https://www.vlm.be/nl/SiteCollectionDocuments/Publicaties/mestbank/Voortgangsrapport%20mest bank_2014.pdf (April 21, 2016),
30.
Sharpley, A. N.; Chapra, S. C.; Wedepohl, R.; Sims, J. T.; Daniel, T. C.; Reddy, K. R.,
Managing agricultural phosphorus for protection of surface waters - issues and options. J.
Environ. Qual. 1994, 23, (3), 437-451. 31.
Vanden Nest, T.; Ruysschaert, G.; Vandecasteele, B.; Houot, S.; Baken, S.; Smolders,
E.; Cougnon, M.; Reheul, D.; Merckx, R., The long term use of farmyard manure and compost: Effects on P availability, orthophosphate sorption strength and P leaching. Agric.
Ecosyst. Environ. 2016, 216, 23-33.
24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
Table 1. Selected properties of the Flemish freshwater and sediment monitoring network 2003-2015. n sampling P10
P50
P90
total sites
surface water MRP† (mg P L-1)
0.035
0.20
1.10
216,513
3,534
TP†
0.14
0.44
1.60
158,477
2,950
pH
6.9
7.6
8.1
23,419
3,080
Ca (mg L-1)
36
97
150
1,283
582
T (°C)
5
12
19
21,571
3,042
DO† (mg O2 L-1)
3.6
7.8
11.3
18,195
2,954
P (mg kg-1 ds)
339
990
2960
1842
762
P/Fe (molar)
0.06
0.13
0.25
668
543
sediment$
†
MRP=molybdate reactive P, TP= total P, DO=dissolved oxygen.;$aqua regia soluble
elements
25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 26 of 31
Figure 1. The seasonal patterns of molybdate reactive P (MRP, blue), dissolved oxygen (DO, green) and water temperature (red) in Flemish surface water 2003-2015, all based on averages. Note the inverted axes for DO. The standard error of the mean (not shown) is about 0.1 °C for temperature, 0.1° mg L-1 for DO and 0.01 mg L-1 for MRP.
26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 27 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 2. Top: long-term average MRP concentrations in surface waters over the period 2003-2015; bottom: sediment Fe concentrations. Note the log scale for both parameters. The 5
27 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 28 of 31
sampling points of the river sediment for the experiments are indicated as yellow stars (top). Maps contain public information obtained under the Free Open Data License Flanders v 1.0.
28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 29 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 3. Top: the MRP concentrations in freshwaters are unrelated to sediment P but significantly increase with sediment molar P/Fe ratio (r=0.34, winter and r=0.32, summer). Each point is the summer or winter months long-term average 2003-2015 within 98 sub-catchments, lines are linear regressions. Bottom: P mobilization from sediment in non-aerated waters at high sediment P/Fe ratio but unrelated to sediment P, temperature effects are small (see supporting information). Sediment data in top panel are based on aqua regia extraction, bottom on acid ammonium oxalate extractable elements. 29
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 30 of 31
Figure 4. The seasonal fluctuations in MRP for sub catchment, classified according to sediment molar P/Fe ratio, and plotted against month (1=January) and dissolved oxygen (DO). Smaller MRP fluctuations are observed in the catchments with low P/Fe. Each point is a long-term average between 2003-2015 per sampling site.
30
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 31 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 5. Release of P (MRP or total dissolved P) in the sediment-water incubation study as affected by the dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration at the sediment:water layer (left) and associated to the release of dissolved Fe. Data refer to all treatments and all incubation periods (0-21 days) after sediment contact. The molar P/Fe ratio of the dissolved fractions is about 0.3 (red dashed line right) for sediments with corresponding molar ratio of 0.4 (red dots) whereas it is generally below 0.01 for sediments with molar P/Fe