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Impacts of storm events on chlorophyll-a variations and controlling factors for algal bloom in a river receiving reclaimed water.

Authors :
Liao, Anran
Han, Dongmei
Song, Xianfang
Yang, Shengtian
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Nov2021, Vol. 297, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Harmful algal bloom is prevalent in the reclaimed-water-source (RWS) river caused by the excessive nutrient's inputs. Rainfall water may be the sole nutrient-diluted water source for the RWS river. However, the effects of storm events on the algal bloom in the RWS river are poorly understood. This study presents chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) variations before, during, and after the initial storm events (Pre-storm, In-storm, and Post-storm) at four representative sites with distinct hydraulic conditions in a dam-regulated RWS river system, Beijing. The response of Chl-a to the initial storm events mostly depends on the ecosystem status that caused by the river hydraulic properties. The upstream is more river-like and downstream is more lake-like. In the river-like system, elevated water temperature (WT, increased by 2 %) could support the dominating algae (diatom) growth (Chl-a increased by 130 %) from Pre-storm to In-storm period. In the lake-like system, the dominant algae (blue algae) declined (Chl-a sharply decreased by 96%–99 %) due to the lower WT (decreased by 3%–7%) and increased flow velocities from Pre-storm to In-storm period. During the Post-storm period, the dominant algae break out (Chl-a surged by 20%–319 %) in the lake-like system caused by the recovered WT (increased by 3%–6%) and flow velocity. The occurrence of algal bloom can be predicted by the Random Forest (RF) model based on water quality parameters such as total nitrogen (TN). The thresholds of algal bloom for the Pre-storm, In-storm, and Post-storm periods were identified as 30 μg/L, 10 μg/L, and 10 μg/L, respectively. The two driven factors were WT and nitrate (NO 3 -N) for the Pre-storm period and were WT and TN for the In- & Post-storm periods. A higher risk of algal bloom is highlighted during the initial storm events in the RWS river. We propose recommendations for improving water quality in the RWS river systems under the climatic change. [Display omitted] • Reveal algal bloom response to the initial storm event in a reclaimed-water-source river. • The chlorophyll a (Chl-a) shows a big fluctuation during the initial storm events. • Algal bloom caused by the elevated water temperature and sufficient nutrients during post-storm. • The variations of algal bloom can be highly predicated by Random Forest model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
297
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152162142
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113376