Author:
Chambers P A,Scrimgeour G J,Pietroniro A
Abstract
Depressions in dissolved oxygen (DO) commonly occur in ice-covered rivers and can be further exacerbated by anthropogenic inputs. To assess the impact of pulp mill and municipal effluents on under-ice oxygen, temporal and spatial patterns in DO were examined for the Athabasca River, Alberta, Canada. Start-up of a bleached kraft mill in 1957 was associated with the lowest late-winter (February-March) DO concentrations ever recorded. Improvements in mill technology since 1977 coincided with increases (P < 0.05) in late-winter DO concentrations at two of three downstream sites and an amelioration in both the magnitude and downstream extent of the DO sag. During recent years (1988-1993), effluent loading resulted in sag and recovery zones over small spatial scales (tens of kilometres) and also contributed to large-scale (hundreds of kilometres) linear declines in DO. A review of oxygen conditions in ice-covered rivers throughout the world likewise showed that DO concentrations decreased linearly with distance below effluent outfalls for most river reaches with effluent concentrations >1%. Our observation that depressions in DO in ice-covered rivers increase with distance downstream raises concerns about safeguarding oxygen levels in northern rivers, especially in view of increasing development in these areas.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
21 articles.
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