Water quality, vegetation, and management of stormwater ponds draining three distinct urban land uses in central Florida

被引:2
|
作者
Skovira, Lindsay M. [1 ,2 ]
Bohlen, Patrick J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cent Florida, Dept Biol, Orlando, FL 32816 USA
[2] US Environm Protect Agcy, Off Water, Washington, DC 20004 USA
关键词
Urbanization; Stormwater ponds; Water quality; Phosphorus; Nitrogen; Land-use; MICROSCALE DETERMINATION; NITROGEN; NITRATE; URBANIZATION; CHLOROPHYLL; COMMUNITIES; PERFORMANCE; PHOSPHORUS; REDUCTION; SEDIMENT;
D O I
10.1007/s11252-023-01335-x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Stormwater ponds are prevalent engineered water features that are designed to mitigate the effects of urban land use on downstream water bodies. These systems contribute significantly to the total area of aquatic ecosystems in some urban watersheds, making them important integrative features for examining human impacts on water ecosystem services. We investigated the distribution of stormwater ponds in relation to different land uses and examined dissolved nutrients in pond water, pond vegetation, and pond management practices in stormwater ponds receiving runoff from distinct urban lands uses in a rapidly developing suburban watershed of Orlando, FL, USA. Stormwater ponds represented 40.2% of the total area of non-forested freshwater systems in the watershed and were dominated by ponds situated in residential (43.7%), followed by roadways (14.7%), and institutional (2.3%) land uses. We randomly selected 8 ponds receiving runoff from each of these three lands uses, using schools to represent the institutional land use, and expressways to represent roadways, and sampled them monthly from May-Sept. 2015 for nutrient and physical characteristics and assessed their general cover of emergent and submerged vegetation. Total nitrogen (TN) concentrations differed significantly between expressway and school ponds, with expressway ponds having TN concentrations 51.7% higher than schools. Both total phosphorus (TP) and TN varied differently through time in the different lands uses and concentrations of most dissolved nutrients separated out from pond vegetative cover in a principal component analysis. Ponds with higher TN and chlorophyll a (chla) concentrations had lower water clarity. Management intensity for removal of aquatic vegetation and algae was lower in school ponds than in expressway and residential ponds, and school ponds contained the highest abundance and diversity of vegetation. Different urban land uses had varying impacts on water quality, and more intense chemical use to control vegetation and algae was related to greater nutrient and chla concentrations and lower water clarity. Our results indicate that there are important differences in nutrient concentration in stormwater ponds in the different land uses that may be related both to differences in surface runoff, and in management practices use to control overgrowth of vegetation and algae.
引用
收藏
页码:867 / 879
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Validation of the Three-Step Strategic Approach for Improving Urban Water Management and Water Resource Quality Improvement
    Galvis, Alberto
    Van der Steen, Peter
    Gijzen, Hubert
    WATER, 2018, 10 (02):
  • [42] Changes in vegetation structure, aboveground biomass and soil quality in response to traditional grazing land management practices in the central highlands of Ethiopia
    Wegi, Teklu
    Hassen, Abubeker
    Bezabih, Melkamu
    Tolera, Adugna
    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF RANGE & FORAGE SCIENCE, 2021, 38 : S52 - S62
  • [43] Relative linkages of stream water quality and environmental health with the land use and hydrologic drivers in the coastal-urban watersheds of southeast Florida
    Abdul-Aziz, Omar I.
    Ahmed, Shakil
    GEOHEALTH, 2017, 1 (04): : 180 - 195
  • [44] Sustainable Design of Urban Stormwater Drainage Systems by Implementing Detention Tank and LID Measures for Flooding Risk Control and Water Quality Management
    Fei Li
    Xu-Feng Yan
    Huan-Feng Duan
    Water Resources Management, 2019, 33 : 3271 - 3288
  • [45] Sustainable Design of Urban Stormwater Drainage Systems by Implementing Detention Tank and LID Measures for Flooding Risk Control and Water Quality Management
    Li, Fei
    Yan, Xu-Feng
    Duan, Huan-Feng
    WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, 2019, 33 (09) : 3271 - 3288
  • [46] Land use contribution to spatiotemporal stream water and ecological quality: Implications for water resources management in peri-urban catchments
    Lemaire, Gregory G.
    Rasmussen, Jes Jessen
    Hoess, Sebastian
    Kramer, Sebastian Figari
    Schittich, Anna-Ricarda
    Zhou, Yujian
    Koppl, Christian J.
    Traunspurger, Walter
    Bjerg, Poul L.
    McKnight, Ursula S.
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2022, 143
  • [47] Land use effects on water quality in the urban agglomeration of Cuiaba and Varzea Grande, Mato Grosso State, central Brazil
    Zeilhofer, Peter
    Nunes Rondon Lima, Eliana Beatriz
    Rosa Lima, Gilson Alberto
    URBAN WATER JOURNAL, 2010, 7 (03) : 173 - 186
  • [48] An examination of the tradeoff between return to land and management, risk, and water quality for crop rotations in Eastern and Central Kansas.
    Stucky, T
    Langemeier, MR
    Nelson, R
    Fjell, D
    Devlin, D
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2000, 25 (02) : 731 - 732
  • [49] Ecological water quality of the Three Gorges Reservoir and its relationship with land covers in the reservoir area: implications for reservoir management
    Ye, Lin
    Chen, Kefeng
    Cheng, Jingjing
    Tan, Lu
    Zhang, Min
    Zhang, Xiaoguang
    Cai, Qinghua
    FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2023, 11
  • [50] The occurrence of microplastics in water bodies in urban agglomerations: Impacts of drainage system overflow in wet weather, catchment land-uses, and environmental management practices
    Chen, Hao
    Jia, Qilong
    Zhao, Xin
    Li, Lei
    Nie, Yunhan
    Liu, Hui
    Ye, Jianfeng
    WATER RESEARCH, 2020, 183