首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


The effect of sewage effluent on Grasmere (English Lake District) with particular reference to inorganic nitrogen transformations
Authors:GRAHAME H HALL  VERA G COLLINS  J GWYNFRYN JONES  RICHARD W HORSLEY
Institution:Freshwater Biological Association, Windermere Laboratory, Cumbria, England
Abstract:SUMMARY. In the summer of 1971 the village of Grasmere was converted from septic tank to mains drainage with sewage treatment at an activated sludge plant. The effluent was discharged into the River Rothay, the main inflow of a nearby small lake (Grasmere). This paper describes some of the effects on the lake. The mean areal hypolimnetic oxygen deficit increased from 274 to 434 mg O2 m?2 day?1 with an accompanying marked increase in the degree of deoxygenation in the hypolimnion. Plate counts of bacteria in the surface water increased for 2 years but this increase was not sustained. The mean summer soluble reactive phosphorus concentration did, however, increase significantly ( P = 0.05), but the same was not true of nitrate levels. This paper is particularly concerned with inorganic nitrogen transformations and analyses of the main inflow have shown that 50–98% of the ammonia and 10–40% of the nilrate entering in this river was derived from the sewage effluent. The concentrations in the main body of the lake were usually lower, possibly due to assimilation and denitrification in the shallower reaches of the lake. Seasonal changes in the inorganic nitrogen species in the hypolimnion showed three distinct phases of activity, ammonification, nitrification and denitrification. Nitrification accounted for approximately a quarter of the oxygen uptake in the hypolimnion.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号