Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA

Nutrient enrichment is currently a leading cause of impairment to streams in Pennsylvania. Evaluating the water quality condition and eutrophic status of streams and rivers is a challenge without established thresholds for nutrient concentrations, which can vary depending on climate and landscape ch...

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Main Authors: John W. Clune, J. Kent Crawford, Elizabeth W. Boyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/12/3550
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spelling doaj-9cd889d9b20b4525b7f6c295465e09212020-12-18T00:05:16ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412020-12-01123550355010.3390/w12123550Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USAJohn W. Clune0J. Kent Crawford1Elizabeth W. Boyer2Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USAEnvironmental Scientist, Hummelstown, PA 17036, USADepartment of Ecosystem Science and Management, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USANutrient enrichment is currently a leading cause of impairment to streams in Pennsylvania. Evaluating the water quality condition and eutrophic status of streams and rivers is a challenge without established thresholds for nutrient concentrations, which can vary depending on climate and landscape characteristics. The US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has published nutrient criteria for nutrient ecoregions nationwide that are used as regional baseline values; and has encouraged states to develop more refined values if better data are available. In this study, we quantified long-term nutrient concentrations observed in streams and rivers across Pennsylvania using a robust water quality dataset compiled from monitoring data collected over the past two decades (2000–2019) by multiple agencies. We estimated nutrient criteria concentration thresholds for each ecoregion using USEPA’s percentile approach. The 25th percentile median concentrations observed in streams and rivers ranged from 0.27 to 2.30 mg/L for total nitrogen (TN), and from 0.010 to 0.053 mg/L for total phosphorus (TP). The percent of sites with available data that exceeded the 25th percentile was 53% for TN and 60% for TP, reflecting longstanding problems with nutrient pollution of rivers and streams in Pennsylvania. The 25th percentile may overestimate background condition levels, as nutrient conditions vary substantially within and among ecoregions. We compared our contemporary concentrations at the threshold values to other published recommended criteria for the region and explored the influence of landscape heterogeneity and seasonality on nutrient concentrations. Our results provide environmental managers with new insights regarding the status of nutrient conditions in streams and rivers across Pennsylvania ecoregions toward further developing numeric nutrient criteria.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/12/3550water qualitystandardsnutrient criteriaecoregionPennsylvaniasurface waters
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John W. Clune
J. Kent Crawford
Elizabeth W. Boyer
spellingShingle John W. Clune
J. Kent Crawford
Elizabeth W. Boyer
Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
Water
water quality
standards
nutrient criteria
ecoregion
Pennsylvania
surface waters
author_facet John W. Clune
J. Kent Crawford
Elizabeth W. Boyer
author_sort John W. Clune
title Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
title_short Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
title_full Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
title_fullStr Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen and Phosphorus Concentration Thresholds Toward Establishing Water Quality Criteria for Pennsylvania, USA
title_sort nitrogen and phosphorus concentration thresholds toward establishing water quality criteria for pennsylvania, usa
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Nutrient enrichment is currently a leading cause of impairment to streams in Pennsylvania. Evaluating the water quality condition and eutrophic status of streams and rivers is a challenge without established thresholds for nutrient concentrations, which can vary depending on climate and landscape characteristics. The US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) has published nutrient criteria for nutrient ecoregions nationwide that are used as regional baseline values; and has encouraged states to develop more refined values if better data are available. In this study, we quantified long-term nutrient concentrations observed in streams and rivers across Pennsylvania using a robust water quality dataset compiled from monitoring data collected over the past two decades (2000–2019) by multiple agencies. We estimated nutrient criteria concentration thresholds for each ecoregion using USEPA’s percentile approach. The 25th percentile median concentrations observed in streams and rivers ranged from 0.27 to 2.30 mg/L for total nitrogen (TN), and from 0.010 to 0.053 mg/L for total phosphorus (TP). The percent of sites with available data that exceeded the 25th percentile was 53% for TN and 60% for TP, reflecting longstanding problems with nutrient pollution of rivers and streams in Pennsylvania. The 25th percentile may overestimate background condition levels, as nutrient conditions vary substantially within and among ecoregions. We compared our contemporary concentrations at the threshold values to other published recommended criteria for the region and explored the influence of landscape heterogeneity and seasonality on nutrient concentrations. Our results provide environmental managers with new insights regarding the status of nutrient conditions in streams and rivers across Pennsylvania ecoregions toward further developing numeric nutrient criteria.
topic water quality
standards
nutrient criteria
ecoregion
Pennsylvania
surface waters
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/12/12/3550
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