Debrauwere, Anouk
[UCL]
de Brye, Benjamin
[UCL]
Servais, Pierre
[ULB]
Passerat, Julien
[ULB]
Deleersnijder, Eric
[UCL]
Recent observations in the tidal Scheldt River and Estuary revealed a poor microbiological
water quality and substantial variability of this quality which can hardly be assigned to
a single factor. To assess the importance of tides, river discharge, point sources, upstream
concentrations, mortality and settling a new model (SLIM-EC) was built. This model was
first validated by comparison with the available field measurements of Escherichia coli
(E. coli, a common fecal bacterial indicator) concentrations. The model simulations agreed
well with the observations, and in particular were able to reproduce the observed longterm
median concentrations and variability. Next, the model was used to perform sensitivity
runs in which one process/forcing was removed at a time. These simulations
revealed that the tide, upstream concentrations and the mortality process are the primary
factors controlling the long-term median E. coli concentrations and the observed variability.
The tide is crucial to explain the increased concentrations upstream of important inputs,
as well as a generally increased variability. Remarkably, the wastewater treatment plants
discharging in the study domain do not seem to have a significant impact. This is due to
a dilution effect, and to the fact that the concentrations coming from upstream (where
large cities are located) are high. Overall, the settling process as it is presently described in
the model does not significantly affect the simulated E. coli concentrations.
Bibliographic reference |
Debrauwere, Anouk ; de Brye, Benjamin ; Servais, Pierre ; Passerat, Julien ; Deleersnijder, Eric. Modelling Escherichia coli concentrations in the tidal Scheldt river and estuary. In: Water Research, Vol. 45, p. 2724-2738 |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/73878 |