Metals, Organic Compounds, and Nutrients in Long Island Sound: Sources, Magnitudes, Trends, and Impacts
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Varekamp, Johan C. (Author)
- McElroy, Anne E. (Author)
- Mullaney, John R. (Author)
- Breslin, Vincent T. (Author)
- Latimer, James S. (Editor)
- Tedesco, Mark A. (Editor)
- Swanson, R. Lawrence (Editor)
- Yarish, Charles (Editor)
- Stacey, Paul E. (Editor)
- Garza, Corey (Editor)
Title
Metals, Organic Compounds, and Nutrients in Long Island Sound: Sources, Magnitudes, Trends, and Impacts
Abstract
Long Island Sound (LIS) is a relatively shallow estuary with a mean depth of 20 m (maximum depth 49 m) and a unique hydrology and history of pollutant loading. These factors have contributed to a wide variety of contamination problems in its muddy sediments, aquatic life, and water column. The LIS sediments are contaminated with toxic compounds and elements related to past and present wastewater discharges and runoff. These include nonpoint and stormwater runoff and groundwater discharges, whose character has changed over the years along with the evolution of its watershed and industrial history. Major impacts have resulted from the copious amounts of nutrients discharged into LIS through atmospheric deposition, domestic and industrial waste water flows, fertilizer releases, and urban runoff. All these sources and their effects are in essence the result of human presence and activities in the watershed, and the severity of pollutant loading and their impacts generally scales with total population in the watersheds surrounding LIS. Environmental legislation passed since the mid-to-late 1900s (e.g., Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act) has had a beneficial effect, however, and contaminant loadings for many toxic organic and inorganic chemicals and nutrients have diminished over the last few decades (O’Shea and Brosnan 2000; Trench et al. 2012; O’Connor and Lauenstein 2006; USEPA 2007). Major strides have been made in reducing the inflow of nutrients into LIS, but cultural eutrophication is still an ongoing problem and nutrient control efforts will need to continue. Nonetheless, LIS is still a heavily human impacted estuary (an “Urban Estuary,” as described for San Francisco Bay by Conomos 1979), and severe changes in water quality and sediment toxicity as well as ecosystem shifts have occurred since the European colonization in the early 1600s (Koppelman et al., 1976). The Sound has seen the most severe environmental changes over the last 400 years during its 10,000 year history (Lewis, this volume), suggesting that human impacts have overwhelmed the natural forces at play.
Book Title
Long Island Sound: Prospects for the Urban Sea
Series
Springer Series on Environmental Management
Date
2014
Publisher
Springer
Place
New York, NY
Pages
203-283
ISBN
978-1-4614-6126-5
Citation Key
varekampMetalsOrganicCompounds2014
Accessed
12/2/19, 9:06 PM
Short Title
Metals, Organic Compounds, and Nutrients in Long Island Sound
Language
en
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Extra
Citation Key Alias: lens.org/113-875-687-538-455
Citation
Varekamp, J. C., McElroy, A. E., Mullaney, J. R., & Breslin, V. T. (2014). Metals, Organic Compounds, and Nutrients in Long Island Sound: Sources, Magnitudes, Trends, and Impacts. In J. S. Latimer, M. A. Tedesco, R. L. Swanson, C. Yarish, P. E. Stacey, & C. Garza (Eds.), Long Island Sound: Prospects for the Urban Sea (pp. 203–283). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-6126-5_5
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