A quantitative typology for distinguishing active and legacy source
contributions to stream water quality
Abstract
Hydrochemical constituents in streams may originate from currently
active sources at the surface and/or legacy sources retained in soil,
slow-flowing groundwater and sediments from earlier surface inputs,
waste deposits, and land contamination. These source contributions need
to be distinguished for effective pollution mitigation and water quality
improvement. This study outlines a methodology for such distinction
based on some general mechanistic differences in stream concentration
and load behavior versus discharge between the contributions from these
different types of sources. The methodology is applied to and tested on
stream concentration data for chloride, nitrogen, phosphorous, copper,
lead, and zinc, and corresponding data for water discharge, measured
over recent decades (time series of 1-3 decades) in multiple Swedish
hydrological catchments of different scales (10-37 catchments depending
on substance, chloride/nutrient/metal, and its monitoring). Mixed
sources are indicated in most (18 of 19) catchments for chloride (with
average 19% active-source contribution to total load), but only in 3-4
(of 37) catchments for total nitrogen and total phosphorus (32-59%
active), and 1-3 (of 11) catchments for copper, lead, and zinc (1-3%
active). Only 1 catchment (of 37) is indicated to have dominant active
sources for total nitrogen, and most catchments thus have dominant
legacy source contributions for all substances. The legacy contributions
correlate well with human activity indicators in the catchments (urban
areas for chloride, agricultural land share for nitrogen, population
density for phosphorus, historic mining and mine waste areas for the
metals), indicating that they are largely anthropogenic. The developed
and tested methodology is relatively simple and can be used to screen
commonly available stream monitoring data for distinction of active and
legacy contributions of any hydrochemical constituent in and across
various hydrological catchment settings.