4.8 Article

Steady-State Land Cover but Non-Steady-State Major Ion Chemistry in Urban Streams

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 22, Pages 13015-13026

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b03587

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BES DEB 1027188, ICER-1540631]
  2. Jess and Mildred Fisher endowment
  3. Jess and Mildred Fisher Endowed Chair

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Sources of many major ions in urban streams remain ambiguous, particularly for ions unrelated to deicing salt use, and temporal patterns in concentrations are unstudied. We used 16 years of water chemistry data based on weekly samples from the Baltimore, MD, USA, metropolitan area and the Weighted Regressions on Time, Discharge, and Season approach to investigate connections between major ions, land cover, and time. All watersheds were underlain by silicate bedrock, contained no regulated point sources, and had stable land cover. Major ion concentrations were higher with greater urban land cover. Notably, concentrations of most ions increased with time in (sub)urban streams and had higher annual variability than in watersheds without impervious surface cover. Nonpoint source contributions from deicing salt and concrete were the predominant influences on major ion concentrations and produced stream chemistry that was distinctly different from forested streams. The novel finding that concentrations of most major ions were not only elevated but increasing in urban streams even with no substantial changes in land cover during the study period has important implications for ecosystem health and water quality, particularly given recent work demonstrating the high correlation between elevated ion concentrations and changes in freshwater biotic communities.

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