Water quality of the Luján river, a lowland watercourse near the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires (Argentina).

Autor: Castañé PM; Applied Ecophysiology Program (PRODEA), Basic Sciences Department, Institute of Ecology and Sustainable Development (INEDES-CONICET), National University of Luján, P.O. Box 221, (B6700ZBA), Luján, Argentina. pcastane@arnet.com.ar., Sánchez-Caro A; Aquatic Ecology Research Group (GIEA), Basic Sciences Department, Institute of Ecology and Sustainable Development (INEDES-CONICET), National University of Luján, P.O. Box 221, (B6700ZBA), Luján, Argentina., Salibián A; Applied Ecophysiology Program (PRODEA), Basic Sciences Department, Institute of Ecology and Sustainable Development (INEDES-CONICET), National University of Luján, P.O. Box 221, (B6700ZBA), Luján, Argentina.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Environmental monitoring and assessment [Environ Monit Assess] 2015 Oct; Vol. 187 (10), pp. 645. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 25.
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-015-4882-y
Abstrakt: Luján river is a lowland watercourse which runs 130 km before flowing into the Río de la Plata Estuary, and receives a mixture of domestic and industrial wastewaters originating at its margins. In order to know the physicochemical profile of its surface water, 36 physical-chemical variables were analyzed in samples collected seasonally between 2004 and 2006 at three sampling stations. The results obtained through the principal component analysis (PCA) suggest that the variations in water quality are explained by natural components (soluble salts; metals), nonpoint inputs (nutrients), and anthropogenic (organic and bacterial) and industrial (toxic heavy metals) pollutants. The cases did not fit a clear spatial or seasonal pattern when plotted against the first two PCA axes. The three water quality indices calculated gave middle scores; Sampling station 1 gave a baseline for the comparison of the river's water quality along its course while Sampling station 3 (downriver) was the most degraded. A variety of pollution pulses reach and affect the watercourse downstream. Cities' sewage discharges into the river seem to be the major polluting factor, together with natural metals and other solutes loads that are present from the headwaters. The results may be useful for the development of local and regional mitigation and remediation programs regarding toxic and eutrophying loads in the upper basin of the river.
Databáze: MEDLINE