scholarly journals Declining bacteria, lead, and sulphate, and rising pH and oxygen in the lower Mississippi River

AMBIO ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Eugene Turner

AbstractVarious air and water pollution issues in the US were confronted in the last 60 years using national policy legislation, notably the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act. I examine changes in the concentrations of bacteria, oxygen, lead, and sulphate at the terminus of the Mississippi River before and after these pollution abatement efforts. Microbial concentrations increased or were stable from 1909 to 1980 but decreased about 3 orders of magnitude after the 1970s, while the average oxygen content increased. A large decline in lead concentration occurred after the 1960s, along with a less dramatic decline in sulphate concentrations. The pH of the river dropped to a low of 5.8 in 1965 as sulfur dioxide emissions peaked and averaged 8.2 in 2019 after emissions declined. Decades of efforts at a national scale created water quality improvements and are an example for addressing new and existing water quality challenges.

Author(s):  
Wuyang Hu

Market-based tools are first suggested in the 1960s considering how society could achieve long-term reductions in pollution without causing an undue burden on the economy. Instead of the government imposes controls (i.e., limiting the right to pollute), market incentives governed by economic principles could be used to guide individual players’ behavior. One of the strategies is to let polluters reallocate the pollution they generate among themselves, or in other words, they decide who actually does the pollution abatement. Those with high costs pollute more (abate less) and those with low costs pollute less (abate more). This type of reallocating through trading could save large amounts of money.


2013 ◽  
Vol 47 (21) ◽  
pp. 11928-11929 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark B. David ◽  
Courtney G. Flint ◽  
Gregory F. McIsaac ◽  
Lowell E. Gentry ◽  
Mallory K. Dolan ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jansen D. Costello ◽  
◽  
Franklin T. Heitmuller ◽  
Paul F. Hudson ◽  
Kevin A. Kuehn ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 71-78
Author(s):  
D. Vitanage ◽  
C. Copelin ◽  
N. Karunatilake ◽  
T. Vourtsanis

This paper outlines Sydney Water’s experience in implementing mains cleaning as part of an integrated approach to water quality improvement. Targeted flushing of water mains is generally used as a first approach to mains cleaning, while swabbing is used as a remedial action where flushing has failed to improve water quality performance. To show the benefits of flushing/swabbing two approaches were taken. The first approach looked at the quality of the discharge water, while the second looked at the compliance and operational data before and after mains cleaning. Using this data, the distribution systems were ranked in terms of water quality improvements. The rankings show that six of the ten Distribution Systems that received the most swabbing now rank in the top ten performers, while four of the ten Distribution Systems that received the most flushing now rank in the top ten performers. The discharge water was found to contain suspended solids, total coliforms, HPC20C, iron, aluminium, manganese and biofilm/biomass. Some coliform species were found to be similar to the bacteria found in compliance coliform failures. An integrated mains cleaning strategy that includes flushing, swabbing and water main rehabilitation is essential to prevent water quality deterioration in the distribution system.


Fisheries ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 334-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yushun Chen ◽  
Kathryn Herzog ◽  
Sagar Shrestha ◽  
Daniel Grigas ◽  
John Farrelly ◽  
...  

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