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Newsletter and Technical Publications
<Planning and Management of Lakes and
Reservoirs: An Integrated Approach to Eutrophication>
CHAPTER 1. ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS OF EUTROPHICATION
1.1. Introduction
Eutrophication of lakes and reservoirs is enrichment with plant
nutrients, mainly phosphorus and nitrogen, which enter as solutes and
bound to organic and inorganic particles. Enhanced growth and increased
abundance of aquatic plants often results in reductions in water quality.
Augmented nutrient inputs to inland waters usually result from
modifications of watersheds, such as deforestation, agricultural and
industrial development and urbanization. Environmental conditions within
the bodies of water and in the airshed and watershed all influence
eutrophication. Factors within lakes that modulate impacts of nutrient
enrichment include food web structure, exchanges between sediments and
water, the shape of the basin and movements of water within the lake or
reservoir. Climatic and hydrologic conditions in the watershed further
alter impacts of eutrophication.
Eutrophication of inland waters ranks as one of the most widespread
environmental problems. It has many significant and negative ecological,
health and economic impacts on the use of a primary and finite resource,
the water. Clean, fresh water is essential for many organisms and for
human societies. Hence, impaired water quality threatens their existence.
Symptoms of eutrophication include algal scums and toxins derived from
algal blooms, massive infestations of certain aquatic plants, increased
incidence of water-related diseases, turbid water, noxious odors and poor
tasting water, depletion of dissolved oxygen, and tainted fish and fish
kills. Some, positive impacts of eutrophication, such as enhanced plant
production and improved fish yields, do occur and can be important.
Indeed, in many countries, fish and other aquatic organisms are
significant sources of food.
According to recent estimates from the United Nations, the world's human
population is increasing by almost 100 million annually and large urban
centers continue to grow rapidly. Half of the world's population is
expected to live in urban areas by the 21st century. Each person will
require clean water to sustain their existence and will generate
phosphorus, nitrogen and organic carbon as waste each day. To meet
everyone's need for food, fertilized agriculture and animal husbandry will
generate additional organic and nutrient-rich wastes. We must find
disposal solutions for the wastes or eutrophication will increase and lead
to non-useable water supplies.
Everywhere in the world, with a few local exceptions, eutrophication is
an acute problem. Sanitation programs often cannot cope with the magnitude
of population growth, particularly in the new megacities (Figure 1.1.).
All available venues, including legislation, urban planning, reuse and
recycling policies, and development of effective and affordable wastewater
treatment technologies, need to be part of the solution. While control of
eutrophication is often technically possible, it may not be economically
feasible.
Figure 1.1. Interrelations of population growth, gross
national product (GNP) and wastewater treatment facilities in the world's
largest cities (from Niemczynowicz, 1991).
Most strategies for management of eutrophication have been developed in
temperate climates for highly developed economies and may require
modification for application to other regions or economic conditions. For
example, while phosphorus control is the primary focus in North America
and Europe, nitrogen is frequently limiting in tropical waters and the
relative importance of phosphorus and nitrogen can vary with time.
Therefore, assessments of conditions in a particular lake or reservoir
should be performed before a management strategy is employed. Variations
in biological, chemical and physical conditions are characteristic of
aquatic ecosystems whether or not perturbed by human activities.
Therefore, discrimination of the influence of a development scheme from
natural changes may be difficult. Hence, an understanding of the
functioning of a lake or reservoir obtained from long-term descriptive
data, experimental manipulations and integrative models are useful in the
evaluation of management options.
The scientific basis for evaluating causes and impacts of eutrophication
is derived primarily from limnology, the study of the physical, chemical,
and biological processes in inland aquatic environments. Limnology has a
long and successful tradition of applying scientific knowledge to the
management of inland waters. Training in limnology should be an integral
part of the education of anyone responsible for the management of lakes or
reservoirs.
Much of our limnological understanding relies on investigations
conducted in mid-latitudes. Therefore an assumption is that fundamental
ecological processes, such as plant requirements for light and nutrients,
operate in a similar fashion generally. Variations in rates and relative
importance of ecological processes among lakes and reservoirs in the same
or different regions are expected.
As an introduction to environmental aspects of eutrophication, this
chapter begins with a brief review of limnological concepts followed by a
characterization of eutrophication and a succinct summary of effects of
eutrophication. Case studies are presented to illustrate the nature of
these effects. The third section of the chapter examines causes of
eutrophication and includes approaches to assess the degree of
eutrophication, uses of models, and results of assessments of
eutrophication throughout the world. Further discussion of external
loading and internal recycling is also provided. Finally, management
guidelines are suggested and brief conclusions offered.
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