Articolo in rivista, 2017, ENG, 10.1007/s11270-017-3505-3
Viviano, G.; Valsecchi, S.; Polesello, S.; Capodaglio, A.; Tartari, G.; Salerno, F.
CNR; Univ Pavia
Several studies have demonstrated that the most effective way to control eutrophication is to reduce phosphorus input at the scale. Water quality monitoring programs need to separately evaluate the different polluting sources to provide a suitable estimate of their relative contributions and thus accurately prioritize possible restoration actions. Urban area cases, where a portion of untreated wastewater is often discharged directly into receiving surface waters by combined sewer overflows (CSOs) during rain events, remain unsolved. In this context, an urban watershed located in Northern Italy with 60 CSOs has been chosen as a case study, and four rainy events have been hourly monitored. The proposed monitoring program consists of the combined use of caffeine and turbidity to estimate the volume and phosphorus load spilled into the river from the CSOs, respectively. Caffeine proved to be a suitablemolecule to quantify the volume of wastewater discharged into water bodies, based on a per capita caffeine load of 10.8 mg inhab(-1) d(-1), estimated in the present work. This research showed that, on average, more than half of the total phosphorus loads transported by the river is due to the CSO discharges (56.5%). The knowledge of the prevailing responsibility of the CSO discharges for the Lambro River quality allows prioritizing effective restoration actions.
Water, air and soil pollution (Print) 228 (9), pp. 1–11
Caffeine, Combined sewer overflow, Phosphorus load, Urban watershed, Anthropogenic marker
Viviano Gaetano, Polesello Stefano, Salerno Franco, Tartari Gianni, Valsecchi Sara Maria
ID: 379187
Year: 2017
Type: Articolo in rivista
Creation: 2017-12-01 11:38:55.000
Last update: 2017-12-23 11:47:55.000
External links
OAI-PMH: Dublin Core
OAI-PMH: Mods
OAI-PMH: RDF
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-017-3505-3
URL: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11270-017-3505-3
External IDs
CNR OAI-PMH: oai:it.cnr:prodotti:379187
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-017-3505-3
ISI Web of Science (WOS): 000410827400013
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85027571092