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2003-GSA_Shrake
2003-GSA_Raftis
References Cited

 

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Nutrient Cycling and Water Quality in an Urban Drinking Water Reservoir

I. The Challenge: Compromised Water Quality

Drinking water reservoir eutrophication burdens a municipal economy in the short term, as costly algicide treatments are applied to control productivity, and possibly the long term as well, as chemical treatments have to be carefully balanced with ecosystem health. Discovering the sources of excess nutrients driving eutrophication, either external via watershed runoff, and/or internal to the reservoir via bottom sediment reflux, then controlling these sources is a nationwide objective.

With water quality, odor, and taste issues as top priorities for the Indianapolis water supply, a research and development partnership spanning twenty years, known as the Central Indiana Water Resources Partnership (CIWRP), was established to conduct detailed analysis of the three water supply reservoirs, including Eagle Creek.


Figure 1. Construction of Eagle Creek Reservoir (ECR), located in the Eagle Creek Watershed, was completed in 1967 to provide downstream flood control for the cities of Indianapolis and Speedway, Indiana (red outline). The reservoir is home to Cagle Creek Park, providing recreational activities such as swimming, boating, fishing, and sporting events. An abandoned quarry adjacent to, but separated from the ECR, serves as a bird sanctuary.

The reservoir became a public drinking water source in 1976 when the T.W. Moses water treatment facility was constructed, using water directly from the reservoir. However, the treatment facility can not effectively remove the high levels of taste and odor compounds that periodically occur in the reservoir as a result of blooms of blue green algae.

The area emptying into ECR is 162 mi2 /419.58 km2, about half of which is used for corn and soybean crops; the reservoir has a water surface area of 1350 acres/5460 m2, and a maximum depth of 54 ft/16.46 m, allowing some regions to become thermally stratified during summer and winter, creating the potential for anoxic bottom waters.

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II. Algal Blooms in ECR

The reservoir experiences periodic algal blooms that can directly affect the taste and odor of the drinking water produced by the T.W. Moses treatment facility. Customer complaints have increased in recent years, and have been attributed to the growth of undesirable algal species, such as the blue green algae Pseudanabaena. Increased nutrient levels in the reservoir are expected to be directly related to the algal blooms.
 


 

Figure 2. Dissolved Oxygen (DO) measured between 1976-1996 at T.W. Moses Water Treatment Facility raw water intake from ECR. Strict state regulations allow copper treatments to occur only when morning DO is > 8. ECR has routinely low DO in mid-summer to early fall, hindering the use of algicides, which would further stress fish populations.


It is widely held that agricultural and urban runoff are primary nonpoint sources of pollution, and may contribute to the degradation of water quality via nutrient loading, specifically phosphorus (P), commonly the growth limiting nutrient in aqueous systems. This increase in external P loading can drive enhanced productivity in a reservoir, leading to lower oxygen contents of deeper waters and thus higher internal P recycling.

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III. The Phosphorus Cycle

In natural waters, the exchange of P between sediments and the overlying water column is a major component of the P cycle. Biologically reactive P is incorporated into terrestrial systems via mineral weathering. After release from minerals, P is often transformed via a series of natural soil-forming processes. Upon erosion from a landscape, the total load of potentially biologically-available P includes dissolved inorganic P, dissolved organic P, and weakly surface-bound P associated with particulates.

Upon entering a reservoir, biologically-available P can be rapidly incorporated into photosynthetic biomass as a limiting nutrient. This P is transformed into an organically-bound fraction, and will be transported to the reservoir sediments upon organism death or consumption via zooplankton.

Another significant component of P for biomass productivity can be introduced to a reservoir internally. In this process, P is regenerated from bottom sediments either by the degradation of organic matter (and thus release of organic P) or by desorption and/or dissolution from mineral surfaces. In low oxygen conditions, this dissolution process can be a substantial contributor of P, due to the dissolution of iron oxyhydroxides, which are typically extremely P-rich.
 


 

Figure 3. A conceptual diagram of P geochemistry in oceanic sediments (from Filippelli and Delaney, 1996).

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III. Hypothesis: Examine the Potential of Internal P Recycling

In several anthropogenically influenced setting like that encountered in the Eagle Creek watershed, the net external input of P to the reservoir can be enhanced by loading from human and industrial waste (sewage is high in reactive P, as are the detergents and surfactants used in industrial processes), from excess fertilizer application in agricultural areas, and from increased weathering of organic-rich surface soils during land use change.

This increase in external P loading can drive enhanced productivity in a reservoir, leading to lower oxygen contents of deeper waters and thus higher internal P recycling. Finally, as the load of external P to reservoir sediments hits a certain threshold, regardless of reducing external inputs, internal recycling of P from P-rich reservoir sediments can drive eutrophication of a reservoir system.

This objective of this research is to investigate the internal P cycling of ECR by analyzing the geochemistry of sediments from the ECR. This is occurring as a two step process,
1. spatial distributions of surficial P within the ECR have been studied
2. detailed analysis of P in its different fractions down four sediment cores is to be undertaken.

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IV. Phase One: Organic Matter Content and Surficial Phosphorus Concentration

Using this sedimentation rate, plus the dry bulk density of the sediment and the average content of P in the reservoir sediments, we obtain a P accumulation rate of about 50 µmol P/cm2/yr. This rate is about 10 to 100 times higher than what is found in lake sediments unaffected by urbanization, revealing the extent of P loading in the ECR.
 

Figure 4. P concentrations in ECR surficial sediments are high compared to background values (soil usually contains 0.5-2 mg/g). The high P contents of ECR sediments reflect the history of P loading and high organic matter productivity. Apparent varves are observed in sediments from the deep hole of the south reservoir, which yield an approximate sedimentation rate here of 1 cm/yr.

Figure 5. The relationship between P and organic matter is relatively strong, supporting the assertion that in situ organic matter productivity is strongly affecting the distribution of both of these components. Organic matter determinations were done on a Loss on Ignition (LOI) basis. The regression line is for all samples.
 


Figure 6. A correlation exists between P and grain size, with finer mean grain sizes correlating with high P contents. Since the grain size analysis was performed on an organic-free basis, the correlation indicates that finer sediments are responsible for retaining a significant portion of the total P signal. The regression line is for all samples.

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V. Phase Two: Figure 8 A-D. Geochemical results of gravity cores
A. Phosphorus
P concentrations cycle from 1.0 mg/g [P] to 2.5 mg/g [P]. Both sections of the reservoir behave in much the same manner.
B. Organic Matter
Organic matter stays constant in the North core, and varies from 6-7 wt. % to 12-14 wt. % in the South. Organic matter does not correlate with P down-core. The lack of correlation between organic matter and P suggests that the P is found in different fractions down-core from the predominantly in situ fraction at the sediment surface.
C & D. Lead and Copper
Lead (fig. 8C) decreases in concentration through time, especially in the upper 20 cm of the cores. The high correlation between P and Pb suggest that they are related to fine particles, as they both show high affinity to particle size below that of 64um in surficial sediments.
After 10-15 cm copper (fig. 8D) concentrations return to those of background levels, as indicated in the core data. The copper spike in the top cm of core represents recent Cutrine Plus applications. Down-core migration of copper is attributed to bioturbation.


V. Phase Two: Continuing Research on Detailed Record of Phosphorus and Metals

Figure 7. Two gravity cores were taken from ECR ( ), one from the northern and southern portions of the reservoir, corresponding to high surficial organic and P concentrations in the deeper regions. Bioturbation was evident within the top 10 cm of each core.

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VI. Continuing Research

The two preliminary cores have added to our understanding of the internal cycling of P, and have also shed light on further core sampling. Geochemical analysis on future cores will include sequential extraction of P in order to pinpoint the amounts of bioavailable fractions within the sediments of ECR.

Detailed grain size analysis, along with historical data from the reservoir, such as flooding events, will be compiled to create a complete history of reservoir through the past 36 years.

This investigation will show how the internal P load is possibly affecting algal blooms within the water column, as related to the physical factors known to occur at the sediment-water interface, including that of hypolimnial anoxia.


 

Acknowledgements

Generous funding is provided by USFilter, Indianapolis Water LLC. The assistance of all those working on the project is gratefully acknowledged. Technical support provided by Bob E. Hall, Vince Hernly, and Jeremy Webber.

References

  • Filippelli, G.M. and Delaney, M.L., 1995, Phosphorus geochemistry and accumulation rates in the eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean: Results from Leg 138: Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, v. 138, p. 757-767.

  • Kleeberg, A., and Kozerski, P., 1997, Phosphorus Release in Labe Grober Muggelsee and its implications for lake restoration, Hydrobiologia, 342/343, 9-26. 

  • Schauser, I., Lewandowske, J., Hupfer, M., 2003, Decision support for the selection of a appropriate in-lake measure to influence the phosphorus retention in sediments, Wat. Res., 37, 801-812. 

  • Schlesinger, W.H., 1997, Biogeochemistry an analysis of global change: San Diego, Academic Press, 588 p. 

  • Tedesco, L.P., Atekwana, E.A., Filippelli, G.M., Licht, K., Shrake, L., Hall, B.E., Pascual, D.L., Latimer, J., Raftis, R., Sapp, D., Lindsey, G., Maness, R., Pershing, D., Peterson, D., Ozekin, K., Mysore, C., and Prevost, M., 2003. Water Quality and Nutrient Cycling in Three Indiana Watersheds and Their Reservoirs: Eagle Creek/Eagle Creek Reservoir, Fall Creek/Geist Reservoir and Cicero Creek/Morse Reservoir. Central Indiana Water Resources Partnership, CEES Publication 2003-01, IUPUI, Indianpolis, IN, 163 p. 

  • Wetzel, Robert G., 1983, Limnology (2d ed): Orlando, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, p. 255-297, chap. 13.

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Publications\2003-GSA_Raftis.ppt

Raftis, R., Filippelli, G., Tedesco, L., Atekwana, E., Latimer, J., Pascual, D.L., and Shrake, L., 2003. Nutrient Cycling and Water Quality in an Urban Drinking Water Reservoir. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. 35(6): 145.