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Read Full Article (file size: 4302596 bytes) Cited by
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,
VOL. 43,
W11422,
doi:10.1029/2007WR005954,
2007
Effects of Urbanization on Organic Carbon Loads in the Sacramento River, California
J. O. Sickman
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of California Riverside, Riverside, California, USA
M. J. Zanoli
Office of Water Quality, California State Department of Water Resources, Sacramento, California, USA
H. L. Mann
Central District, California State Department of Water Resources, Sacramento, California, USA
Abstract
To gain better understanding of the effects of urbanization on organic matter transport in rivers, we quantified total organic
carbon loading from point and non-point urban sources within the metropolitan area of Sacramento and compared these loads
to the amount of organic carbon carried in the downstream Sacramento River. Median total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations
in the Sacramento River, non-point urban runoff and wastewater treatment plant effluent were 2.1, 8.9, and 23 mg L−1, respectively. Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in non-point runoff and the river had similar specific UVA absorbance and disinfection
by-product formation potential, but based on radiocarbon measurements, non-point DOC was substantially older (age > 2000 a)
than DOC in the Sacramento River. This finding suggests that DOC in non-point runoff is derived primarily from leaching of
older soil organic matter. The 10th, 50th, 90th and 99th percentile contributions of urban sources to daily TOC load in the
Sacramento River were 10%, 20%, 38% and 80%, respectively. Total urban TOC yield was 150 kg ha−1yr−1 and urban sources contributed ∼17% of the annual load of TOC in the Sacramento River below Sacramento.
Received 7
February
2007;
accepted 11
September
2007;
published 27
November
2007.
Keywords: Rivers;
organic carbon;
urban runoff;
first-flush storms;
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta;
disinfection by-products;
soil organic matter.
Index Terms: 0428 Biogeosciences: Carbon cycling (4806); 0454 Biogeosciences: Isotopic composition and chemistry (1041, 4870); 0493 Biogeosciences: Urban systems; 1871 Hydrology: Surface water quality; 1879 Hydrology: Watershed.
Read Full Article (file size: 4302596 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Sickman, J. O., M. J. Zanoli, and H. L. Mann
(2007),
Effects of Urbanization on Organic Carbon Loads in the Sacramento River, California,
Water Resour. Res.,
43,
W11422,
doi:10.1029/2007WR005954.
Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
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