TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatio-temporal variations in stable isotopes in peri-urban catchments
T2 - A preliminary assessment of potential and challenges in assessing streamflow sources
AU - Kuhlemann, Lena Marie
AU - Tetzlaff, Doerthe
AU - Soulsby, Chris
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded as part of the Research Training Group “Urban Water Interfaces (UWI)”, GRK 2032, by the German Research foundation (DFG) and supported by the Einstein Foundation through the project “Modelling surface and groundwater with isotopes in urban catchments (MOSAIC)”. Contributions from C.S. were funded by the Leverhulme Trust’s ISOLAND project.
We thank N. Weiß, D. Dubbert, E. Brakkee, A. Wieland and A. Dahlmann for help with the sampling; D. Dubbert for running the isotope analysis and A. Smith for help with the data analysis. We also thank the BWB, Berlin Senate, LfU Brandenburg and Stadtwerke Werneuchen for their assistance in sampling and data provision.
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - In peri-urban catchments where treated wastewater effluents are released into surface waters, knowledge of water sources and partitioning is important for mitigating water quality impacts, particularly during warm and dry periods with low discharge rates. Useful tools for the identification of water sources and flow paths under different wetness conditions are isotope tracers. However, very few studies have been carried out so far in urbanized catchments with complex land use distributions where natural headwaters interact with engineered components, e.g. effluent discharge. We undertook spatio-temporal sampling of isotopes, combined with water quality measurements, to complement climatic and hydrometric data across the 220 km2 peri-urban Erpe catchment near Berlin and assess seasonal changes in water sources during two exceptionally warm and dry years (2018 and 2019). The study showed a deterioration of water quality downstream of two municipal wastewater treatment plants; and the depletion of groundwater storage, along with isotopic enrichment of the stream, in summer 2019 (the second consecutive year with above-average temperatures and marked precipitation deficits). Streamflow in the upper reaches of the catchment was dominated by groundwater-fed tributaries in winter, but became increasingly dominated by wastewater in summer. In the lower catchment, flows were dominated by effluent from a large wastewater treatment plant, especially in summer. Young water from precipitation and urban storm runoff accounted for < 10 % of streamflow, despite the catchment being ~ 20 % urban. Similarities in the composition of wastewater and other runoff sources resulted in high uncertainties in end member separation and highlight the need for monitoring of other tracers to better characterize water impacts. Given climate change projections for the region are for drier, warmer summers, wastewater is likely to become a more dominant component of streams, which may have implications for environmental quality and ecosystem services.
AB - In peri-urban catchments where treated wastewater effluents are released into surface waters, knowledge of water sources and partitioning is important for mitigating water quality impacts, particularly during warm and dry periods with low discharge rates. Useful tools for the identification of water sources and flow paths under different wetness conditions are isotope tracers. However, very few studies have been carried out so far in urbanized catchments with complex land use distributions where natural headwaters interact with engineered components, e.g. effluent discharge. We undertook spatio-temporal sampling of isotopes, combined with water quality measurements, to complement climatic and hydrometric data across the 220 km2 peri-urban Erpe catchment near Berlin and assess seasonal changes in water sources during two exceptionally warm and dry years (2018 and 2019). The study showed a deterioration of water quality downstream of two municipal wastewater treatment plants; and the depletion of groundwater storage, along with isotopic enrichment of the stream, in summer 2019 (the second consecutive year with above-average temperatures and marked precipitation deficits). Streamflow in the upper reaches of the catchment was dominated by groundwater-fed tributaries in winter, but became increasingly dominated by wastewater in summer. In the lower catchment, flows were dominated by effluent from a large wastewater treatment plant, especially in summer. Young water from precipitation and urban storm runoff accounted for < 10 % of streamflow, despite the catchment being ~ 20 % urban. Similarities in the composition of wastewater and other runoff sources resulted in high uncertainties in end member separation and highlight the need for monitoring of other tracers to better characterize water impacts. Given climate change projections for the region are for drier, warmer summers, wastewater is likely to become a more dominant component of streams, which may have implications for environmental quality and ecosystem services.
KW - Ecohydrology
KW - Hydrogeochemistry
KW - Peri-urban catchments
KW - Stable isotopes
KW - Tracers
KW - Wastewater effluents
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85111061123&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2021.126685
DO - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2021.126685
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85111061123
VL - 600
JO - Journal of Hydrology
JF - Journal of Hydrology
SN - 0022-1694
M1 - 126685
ER -