Simplified Procedures for Eutrophication Assessment and Prediction: User Manual


Book Description

Eutrophication has several direct and indirect effects on reservoir water quality and uses. The report documents assessment procedures which have been developed for application to Corps of Engineers reservoirs. Study phases include problem identification, data gathering, and model implementation. Three computer programs are designed to assist in the last two phases: (a) FLUX-- estimation of tributary nutrient loadings from grab-sample concentration data and continuous flow records using a variety of calculation methods which permit quantification of potential errors and evaluation of alternative sampling program designs; (b) PROFILE--display and reduction of pool water quality data, including calculation of hypolimnetic oxygen depletion rates, characterization of spatial and temporal variability, and robust statistical summary of mixed- layer concentration data; and (c) BATHTUB--implementation of nutrient balance models and eutrophication response models in a spatially segmented hydraulic network which accounts for advective transport, diffusive transport, and nutrient sedimentation.







Empirical Methods for Predicting Eutrophication in Impoundments. Report 4. Phase III. Applications Manual


Book Description

This report describes simplified procedures for assessment and prediction of eutrophication-related water quality conditions on Corps of Engineer (CE) reservoirs. Three computer programs have been written to facilitate data reduction and model implementation. Common measures of eutrophication include total nutrient concentrations (phosphorus and nitrogen), chlorophyll-a (a measure of algal density), Secchi depth (a measure of transparency), organic nutrient forms (nitrogen and carbon), and hypolimnetic dissolved oxygen depletion. The basis of the modeling approach described is to relate eutrophication symptoms to external nutrient loadings, hydrology, and reservoir morphometry using statistical models derived from a representative cross section of reservoirs. For existing reservoirs, the relationships provide a framework for interpreting water quality monitoring data and predicting effects of future changes in external nutrient loadings. The models can also be used to predict water quality conditions in a proposed reservoir.




Restoration and Management of Lakes and Reservoirs


Book Description

It has been more than ten years since the last edition of the bestselling Restoration and Management of Lakes and Reservoirs. In that time, lake and reservoir management and restoration technologies have evolved and an enhanced version of this standard resource is long overdue. Completely revised and updated, the third edition continues the










Estimating Combined Loads of Diffuse and Point-Source Pollutants Into the Borkena River, Ethiopia


Book Description

This book is an initial attempt to estimate the loads of heavy metal and nutrient loads into an industrial effluent receiving rivers of a typical industrializing catchment. It shows the effects and impacts of diffuse and point sources of these loads into the rivers, and illuminate management, capacity and policy gaps of riverine water and sediment monitoring in the sub-Saharan countries perspective from Ethiopia. The study was done in semi-arid catchments of Kombolcha city with industrialising urban and peri-urban areas in north-central Ethiopia. The Leyole and Worka rivers, which receives industrial effluent and wash-off from the catchments’ areas, were monitored for two years. This book contribute to our understanding on applicable methods to quantify loads of diffuse and point sources in data poor areas, and the most important contribution is to address the gaps in in controlling emission changes and. The results of this book contribute to the theory of river protection and understanding of water quality management of sub-Saharan African tropical rivers and sediments and provides policy options for improvement in rivers water quality of the sub-Saharan countries. In bridging this gap, this book proposed a model to estimate the total loads of nitrogen and phosphorus from a catchment.




More people, more food, worse water?


Book Description