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Concentrations and loads of PCBs, dioxins, PAHs, PBDEs, OC pesticides and pyrethroids during storm and low flow conditions in a small urban semi-arid watershed. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Urban runoff is a significant source of pollutants in San Francisco Bay, prompting extensive measurement of suspended sediments and trace organic pollutants during both dry and storm conditions from a completely urban watershed.
  • The study found that urban runoff responded quickly to rainfall, showing substantial fluctuations in turbidity and pollutant concentrations, with most organic pollutants in similar ranges as other urban runoff studies, though some data was limited.
  • Over 91% of pollutant loads occurred during storm events, highlighting the importance of managing stormwater runoff to reduce pollution in urban watersheds, information that can be applied in various global contexts.

Article Abstract

Urban runoff has been identified in water quality policy documents for San Francisco Bay as a large and potentially controllable source of pollutants. In response, concentrations of suspended sediments and a range of trace organic pollutants were intensively measured in dry weather and storm flow runoff from a 100% urban watershed. Flow in this highly urban watershed responded very quickly to rainfall and varied widely resulting in rapid changes of turbidity, suspended sediments and pollutant concentrations. Concentrations of each organic pollutant class were within similar ranges reported in other studies of urban runoff, however comparison was limited for several of the pollutants given information scarcity. Consistently among PCBs, PBDEs, and PAHs, the more hydrophobic congeners were transported in larger proportions during storm flows relative to low flows. Loads for Water Years 2007-2010 were estimated using regression with turbidity during the monitored months and a flow weighted mean concentration for unmonitored dry season months. More than 91% of the loads for every pollutant measured were transported during storm events, along with 87% of the total discharge. While this dataset fills an important local data gap for highly urban watersheds of San Francisco Bay, the methods, the uniqueness of the analyte list, and the resulting interpretations have applicability for managing pollutant loads in urban watersheds in other parts of the world.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.04.052DOI Listing

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