Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

42
Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality
  • date post

    20-Jan-2016
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    214
  • download

    0

Transcript of Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Page 1: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Dr. Martin T. AuerMTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering

Surface Water Quality

Page 2: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

• water supply

• wastewater discharge

• recreation

Surface Water Quality Management

Page 3: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Add Clark

In A Watershed Everyone Lives Downstream

Page 4: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

• water supply

• wastewater discharge

• recreation

Surface Water Quality Management

Page 5: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Temperature and the Density of Water

1.0000

0.9995

0.9990

0.9985

0.9980

0.9975

0.9970

0.9965

0.9960

0.99550.9950

Den

sity

(g∙

cm3 )

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Temperature (°C)

MaximumDensity3.94 °C

Page 6: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Thermal Stratification

spring summer

Temperature (°C)

Page 7: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Thermal Stratification

Page 8: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Seasonality in Stratification and Mixing

= °C

Page 9: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Dollar Bay - Temperature

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7 8

Dep

th (

m)

0 5 10 15 20

Temperature (°C)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Dep

th (

m)

M A M J J A S O N D

Page 10: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

You are what you eat. For example, there’s this lake …

Page 11: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

… and there’s that lake.

Page 12: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Oligotrophic

Low in algae

High transparency

Cold water fishery

Eutrophic

High in algae

Low transparency

Warm water fishery

Trophic State

Page 13: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

The Limiting Nutrient Concept

The Supplies

The Product

Page 14: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

The Divided Lake

Page 15: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Productivity and Oxygen

Page 16: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Trophic State and Oxygen Profiles

Orthograde

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

0 5 10 15 20 25

De

pth

(m

)

Clinograde

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

0 5 10 15 20 25

De

pth

(m

)

Oligotrophic Lake Eutrophic Lake

Temperature (°C) Temperature (°C)

Page 17: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Dollar Bay - Temperature

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7 8

0 5 10 15 20

Temperature (°C)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Dep

th (

m)

M A M J J A S O N D

Page 18: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Dollar Bay – Dissolved Oxygen

Dep

th (

m)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

0 2 4 6 8 10 12

Dissolved Oxygen (mg∙L-1)

M A M J J A S O N D

Page 19: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Onondaga Lake – Dissolved Oxygen

Page 20: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Oneida Lake – Dissolved Oxygen

Page 21: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Lake Erie – Dissolved Oxygen

Page 22: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Gulf of Mexico – Dissolved Oxygen

Page 23: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Aerobic and Anaerobic Metabolism

2

3

4

3

24

2

2

2

2

2

2 3

2 2

2 2

2 2

2 2

2 2

2

2

2

42 2

( )

( )

( )

( )

( )

( )

N HCO

M

CO H O

CO H O

CO H O

CO H

O

NO

M

C H O

C H O

C H O

C H O

C H O

C H O

O

CO

n

Fe

H

n

F

S

CH

e

H O

CO

SO

Aerobic (oxygen available)

Anaerobic (oxygen not available)

Page 24: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Oligotrophic

Low in nutrients, TP<10

Low in algae

Oxygen at saturation

High transparency

Cold water fishery

Deep lakes with steep sides and infertile, often rocky watersheds.

Eutrophic

High in nutrients, TP>20

High in algae

Oxygen (+, epi), (-, hyp)

Low transparency

Warm water fishery

Shallow lakes with gently sloping sides and cultivated, fertile watersheds.

Page 25: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Natural Eutrophication

Page 26: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Cultural Eutrophication

Page 27: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Lakes: Loss of Beneficial Use

• Nutrients – aesthetics, recreation, drinking water

• Microorganisms – recreation, drinking water

• Toxics – wildlife, drinking water• heavy metals: cadmium, lead, mercury• synthetic organic chemicals: DDT, PCB, dioxin

Page 28: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

1. Lake Protection• Point source control (advanced waste treatment)• Nonpoint source control

Page 29: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

1. Lake Protection• Point source control• Nonpoint source control (land use management)

Page 30: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

2. Diversion

Onondaga Lake

Seneca River

METRO

Page 31: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

3. Hypolimnetic Aeration

Support RaftGas Vent

SupportCables

ContactChamber

Air Line &Diffuser

Ballast

Page 32: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

4. Sediment Inactivation

Page 33: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

5. Dredging

Page 34: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

6. Algicides

Page 35: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Engineering Approaches for Lake Management(Phosphorus)

7. Biomanipulation

Page 36: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

River Water Quality

Page 37: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Add Clark

In A Watershed Everyone Lives Downstream

Page 38: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Biochemical Oxygen Demand

BOD exerted, y

BOD remaining, L

Page 39: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Dissolved Oxygen Saturation and Deficit

6.0

8.0

10.0

12.0

14.0

16.0

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Temperature (°C)

Dis

solv

ed O

xyg

en (

mg

/L,

pp

m)

Page 40: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Change in oxygen concentration =

inputs from reaeration – losses to deoxygenation

Dissolved Oxygen Sag Curve

Page 41: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Stream Zones and Biota

Page 42: Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Surface Water Quality.

Organism Diversity and Abundance