We compared monthly data taken during the dry summer growing season of 2002 in 11 potable water supply reservoirs (19-85 years old based on year filled) within the North Carolina Piedmont, including measures of watershed land use, watershed area, reservoir morphometry (depth, surface area, volume), suspended solids (SS), nutrient concentrations (total nitrogen, TN; total Kjeldahl nitrogen, TKN; nitrate + nitrite, NO3- + NO2-; total phosphorus, TP; total organic carbon), phytoplankton chlorophyll a (chla) concentrations, cyanobacteria assemblages, and microcystin concentrations from monthly data taken during the dry summer 2002 growing season. The reservoirs were considered collectively or as two subgroups by age as mod. (moderate age, 19-40 years post-fill, n = 5) and old (74-85 yr post-fill, n = 6). The run-of-river impoundments were meso-/eutrophic and turbid (means 25-125 g TP/L, 410-1,800 g TN/L, 3-70 g chla/L and 5.7-41.9 mg SS/L). Under drought conditions in these turbid systems, there was a positive relationship between chla and both TN and TP, supported by correlation analyses and hierarchical ANOVA models. The models also indicated significant positive relationships between TN and TP, and between SS and both TP and TN. Agricultural land use was positively correlated with TKN for the reservoirs considered collectively, and with TN, TKN, TP, and chla in mod. reservoirs. In models considering the reservoirs by age group, TN:TP ratios were significantly lower and NO3- + NO2- was significantly higher in old reservoirs, and these relationships were stronger when reservoir age was used as a linear predictor. Cyanobacteria assemblages in the two reservoir age groups generally were comparable in abundance and species composition, and comprised 60-95% (up to 1.9 × 106 cells/mL) of the total phytoplankton cell number. Potentially toxic taxa were dominated by Cylindrospermopsis raciborskii and C. philippinensis. Although known microcystin producers were low in abundance, microcystin ( ≥0.8 μg/L) was detected in most samples. TP and chla were significant predictors of total cyanobacterial abundance. The data suggest that at present these turbid, meso-/eutrophic reservoirs have moderate cyanobacteria abundance and low cyanotoxin (microcystin) levels over the summer growing season, even in low-precipitation seasons that favor cyanobacteria. Accelerated eutrophication from further watershed development is expected to promote increased cyanobacterial abundance and adversely affect the value of these reservoirs as potable water supplies. © Copyright by the North American Lake Management Society 2007.
CITATION STYLE
Touchette, B. W., Burkholder, J. M., Allen, E. H., Alexander, J. L., Kinder, C. A., Brownie, C., … Britton, C. H. (2007). Eutrophication and cyanobacteria blooms in run-of-river impoundments in North Carolina, U.S.A. In Lake and Reservoir Management (Vol. 23, pp. 179–192). https://doi.org/10.1080/07438140709353921
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.