Search results for " Water quality"

showing 10 items of 65 documents

Water quality modelling for ephemeral rivers: Model development and parameter assessment

2010

Summary River water quality models can be valuable tools for the assessment and management of receiving water body quality. However, such water quality models require accurate model calibration in order to specify model parameters. Reliable model calibration requires an extensive array of water quality data that are generally rare and resource-intensive, both economically and in terms of human resources, to collect. In the case of small rivers, such data are scarce due to the fact that these rivers are generally considered too insignificant, from a practical and economic viewpoint, to justify the investment of such considerable time and resources. As a consequence, the literature contains v…

Hydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleModel parameter assessmentEphemeral keymedia_common.quotation_subjectSettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaDrainage basinWater quality modellingRiver water qualityWater resourcesField campaignHydrology (agriculture)Data qualityEnvironmental scienceQuality (business)Water qualitySensitivity analysisWater Science and Technologymedia_commonJournal of Hydrology
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Uncertainty assessment of an integrated urban drainage model

2009

Over the last few years, the use of mathematical models has gained importance in urban drainage system management; indeed, such models enable the combined analysis of different components that constitute a drainage system; the sewer system, wastewater treatment plant and the receiving water body. The effectiveness of an integrated approach has been widely demonstrated in the past and is presented in the EU Water Framework Directive, which also introduces a new point of view regarding the water quality management of the whole system, requiring a global analysis at the river basin scale for pollutant sources. However, integrated urban drainage models introduce several uncertain factors that a…

Hydrologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleSettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaDrainage basinCivil engineeringIntegrated urban drainage modelling Environmental water quality management Pollution evaluation Uncertainty analysisHydrology (agriculture)Water Framework DirectiveUrban planningDrainage system (geomorphology)Environmental scienceSanitary sewerDrainageUncertainty analysisWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Hydrology
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Uncertainty Propagation in Integrated Urban Water Quality Modelling

2018

Sensitivity and uncertainty assessment of integrated urban drainage water quality models are crucial steps in the evaluation of the reliability of model results. Indeed, the assessment of the reliability of the results of complex water quality models is crucial in understanding their significance. In the case of integrated urban drainage water quality models, due to the fact that integrated approaches are basically a cascade of sub-models (simulating the sewer system, wastewater treatment plant and receiving water body), uncertainty produced in one sub-model propagates to the following ones in a manner dependent on the model structure, the estimation of parameters and the availability and u…

Mathematical optimizationPropagation of uncertaintySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleComputer scienceStandard deviationpollution evaluationKeywords: Integrated urban drainage modelling Environmental water quality management Pollution evaluation Uncertainty analysisIntegrated urban drainage modellingSensitivity (control systems)Water qualityDrainageGLUEuncertainty analysisenvironmental water quality managementUncertainty analysisReliability (statistics)
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Multiple stressors in Mediterranean coastal wetland ecosystems : Influence of salinity and an insecticide on zooplankton communities under different …

2021

Temperature increase, salinity intrusion and pesticide pollution have been suggested to be among the main stressors affecting the biodiversity of coastal wetland ecosystems. Here we assessed the single and combined effects of these stressors on zooplankton communities collected from a Mediterranean coastal lagoon. An indoor microcosm experiment was designed with temperature variation (20 °C and 30 °C), salinity (no addition, 2.5 g/L NaCl) and the insecticide chlorpyrifos (no addition, 1 μg/L) as treatments. The impact of these stressors was evaluated on water quality variables and on the zooplankton comunity (structure, diversity, abundance and taxa responses) for 28 days. This study shows …

Mediterranean climateEnvironmental Risk AssessmentInsecticidesSalinityAquatic Ecology and Water Quality ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringSoil salinityHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis0208 environmental biotechnologyBiodiversity02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesZooplanktonZooplanktonEnvironmental ChemistryAnimalsClimate changeEcosystemPesticidesMultiple stressorsEcosystem0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWIMEKbiologyEcologyfungiSalinizationPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthTemperatureQ Science (General)General MedicineGeneral ChemistryAquatische Ecologie en Waterkwaliteitsbeheerbiology.organism_classificationPollution020801 environmental engineeringSalinityCladoceraWetlandsCoastal lagoonsEnvironmental scienceMicrocosm
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Changes in the flow and quality of water in the dam reservoir of the Mała Panew catchment (South Poland) characterized by multidimensional data analys…

2023

Multidimensional exploratory techniques, such as the Principal Component Analysis (PCA), have been used to analyze long-term changes in the fl ow regime and quality of water of the lowland dam reservoir Turawa (south-west Poland) in the catchment of the Mała Panew river (a tributary of the Odra). The paper proves that during the period of 1998–2016 the Turawa reservoir was equalizing the river’s water fl ow. Moreover, various physicochemical water quality indicators were analyzed at three measurement points (at the tributary’s mouth into the reservoir, in the reservoir itself and at the outfl ow from the reservoir). The water quality assessment was performed by analyzing physicochemical ind…

Multidimensional analysisHydrologyPrincipal Component Analysis (PCA).geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryWater flowFlow (psychology)Drainage basinGeneral Medicinewater reservoir; river; water fl ow; water quality; multidimensional data analysisStream flowEnvironmental scienceStatistical analysisWater qualityTotal suspended solidsArchives of Environmental Protection
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From local measures to regional impacts: Modelling changes in nutrient loads to the Baltic Sea

2021

Study Region: Our study region is the Baltic Sea Drainage Basin (BSDB), which covers an area of 1.8 Mio km2 distributed over 14 countries in northern Europe. Study Focus: We use a large-scale hydrological and nutrient transport model (E-HYPE) to model basin-wide impacts of measure scenarios on the Baltic Sea, where eutrophication is a critical issue for the marine ecosystem. We constructed measure scenarios based on stakeholder acceptance, established in workshops in different regions around the Baltic. These measures include local stream reach to catchment scale measures aiming to reduce nutrient transport into the stream network (buffer strips, stormwater ponds) and measures aiming to red…

Physical geographyBaltic SeaBaltic Sea; E-HYPE; Hydrological modelling; Nutrient load reduction; Scenario impacts; Water qualityStormwaterDrainage basinBuffer stripOceanografi hydrologi och vattenresurserStructural basinOceanography Hydrology and Water ResourcesNutrientHydrological modellingEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Marine ecosystemEcosystemWater Science and TechnologyScenario impactsQE1-996.5geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryE-HYPEGeologyGB3-5030Nutrient load reductionWater qualityEnvironmental scienceWater resource managementEutrophicationJournal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
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Receiving water body quality assessment: an integrated mathematical approach applied to an Italian case study

2011

This study presents a basin-scale approach to the analysis of receiving water body quality considering both point and non-point pollution sources. In particular, this paper describes an extensive data gathering campaign carried out in the Nocella catchment, which is an agricultural and semi-urbanised basin located in Sicily, Italy. Two sewer systems, two wastewater treatment plants and a river reach were monitored during both dry and wet weather periods. A mathematical model of the entire integrated system was also created. Specifically, a detailed modelling approach was developed by employing three well known models: Storm Water Management Model, GPS-X and Soil and Water Assessment Tool. T…

PollutionAtmospheric ScienceSoil and Water Assessment Toolmedia_common.quotation_subjectDrainage basinPoint source pollutionnon-point pollution sourceQuality (business)Civil and Structural EngineeringWater Science and Technologymedia_commongeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-Ambientalebusiness.industryriver water quality monitoringSettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaEnvironmental engineeringriver water quality modellingStorm Water Management ModelGeotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geologyurban drainage-integrated modellingpoint pollution sourceAgricultureEnvironmental scienceWater qualityWater resource managementbusinessJournal of Hydroinformatics
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Emission standards versus immission standards for assessing the impact of urban drainage on ephemeral receiving water bodies

2010

In the past, emission standard indicators have been adopted by environmental regulation authorities in order to preserve the quality of a receiving water body. Such indicators are based on the frequency or magnitude of a polluted discharge that may be continuous or intermittent. In order to properly maintain the quality of receiving waters, the Water Framework Directive, following the basic ideas of British Urban Pollution Manual, has been established. The Directive has overtaken the emission-standard concept, substituting it with the stream-standard concept that fixes discharge limits for each polluting substance depending on the self-depurative characteristics of receiving waters. Stream-…

PollutionConservation of Natural ResourcesTime FactorsEnvironmental EngineeringRainmedia_common.quotation_subjecturban drainage integrated modelling Water Framework Directive water quality management water quality monitoringEnvironmentWaste Disposal FluidDrainage system (geomorphology)Water MovementsCitiesDrainageWater Science and Technologymedia_commonSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleEmission standardSettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaDrainage SanitaryWater PollutionEnvironmental engineeringWaterModels TheoreticalWastewaterWater Framework DirectiveEnvironmental scienceCombined sewerWater qualityWater resource managementWater Science and Technology
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Receiving water quality assessment: comparison between simplified and detailed integrated urban modelling approaches

2010

Urban water quality management often requires use of numerical models allowing the evaluation of the cause–effect relationship between the input(s) (i.e. rainfall, pollutant concentrations on catchment surface and in sewer system) and the resulting water quality response. The conventional approach to the system (i.e. sewer system, wastewater treatment plant and receiving water body), considering each component separately, does not enable optimisation of the whole system. However, recent gains in understanding and modelling make it possible to represent the system as a whole and optimise its overall performance. Indeed, integrated urban drainage modelling is of growing interest for tools to …

Quality ControlMathematical optimizationEnvironmental EngineeringQuality managementComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectWater SupplyDrainage system (geomorphology)Sensitivity analysisQuality (business)mathematical modellingReliability (statistics)Uncertainty analysisurban drainage integrated modellingWater Science and Technologymedia_commonMathematical modelSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleUrbanizationSettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaEnvironmental engineeringriver water qualitysensitivity analysiModels TheoreticalWater Framework Directiveuncertainty analysi
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Urban Storm-Water Quality Management: Centralized versus Source Control

2010

The continuous growth of urban areas and the increasing public awareness of the environmental impacts of storm water have raised interest on the quality of the receiving water bodies. In the past two decades, many efforts have been directed at improving urban drainage systems by introducing mitigation measures to limit the negative environmental impacts of storm water. These mitigation measures are generally called best management practices (BMPs), sustainable urban drainage systems, or low impact developments, and they include practices such as infiltration and storage tanks that reduce the peak flow and retain some of the polluting materials. Choosing the best mitigation measure is still …

Quality managementSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleBest practiceGeography Planning and DevelopmentStormwaterStormManagement Monitoring Policy and LawWater resourcesEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental impact assessmentDrainageWater resource managementSurface runoffEnvironmental planningBest management practices Receiving water impact Urban water quality Storm-water infiltration Integrated urban drainage modeling.Water Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural Engineering
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