Litcius/Paper detail

Impact of Combined Sewer Systems on the Quality of Urban Streams: Frequency and Duration of Elevated Micropollutant Concentrations

Ulrich Dittmer, Anna Bachmann-Machnik, Marie A. Launay

2020Water27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Water quality in urban streams is highly influenced by emissions from WWTP and from sewer systems particularly by overflows from combined systems. During storm events, this causes random fluctuations in discharge and pollutant concentrations over a wide range. The aim of this study is an appraisal of the environmental impact of micropollutant loads emitted from combined sewer systems. For this purpose, high-resolution time series of river concentrations were generated by combining a detailed calibrated model of a sewer system with measured discharge of a small natural river to a virtual urban catchment. This river base flow represents the remains of the natural hydrological system in the urban catchment. River concentrations downstream of the outlets are simulated based on mixing ratios of base flow, WWTP effluent, and CSO discharge. The results show that the standard method of time proportional sampling of rivers does not capture the risk of critical stress on aquatic organisms. The ratio between average and peak concentrations and the duration of elevated concentrations strongly depends on the source and the properties of the particular substance. The design of sampling campaigns and evaluation of data should consider these characteristics and account for their effects.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceCombined sewerSTREAMSHydrology (agriculture)Water qualityPollutantDrainage basinEffluentSampling (signal processing)Base flowStormwaterEnvironmental monitoringStormEnvironmental engineeringSurface runoffEcologyGeologyComputer scienceComputer networkGeotechnical engineeringComputer visionBiologyOceanographyCartographyFilter (signal processing)GeographyUrban Stormwater Management SolutionsWater Quality and Pollution AssessmentPharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental Impacts