Author:
Fabris G. J.,Monahan C. A.,Batley G. E.
Abstract
Despite significant inputs of heavy metals from rivers, creeks and drains and
a major sewage treatment plant to Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia,
attenuation processes in the water column are such that metal concentrations
in the bay waters are comparable to uncontaminated estuaries elsewhere in the
world. Sedimentation appeared to be largely responsible for metal removal,
with strong correlations between particulate metals and iron in input waters
sampled over a storm event. Storm events contributed between 9 (Zn) and 21
(Cr) times the metal loads that enter the bay during low flow conditions.
Although metal accumulations in sediments are below guideline concentrations
in the major deposition zones, they are highest close to input sources. A
unique feature of bay waters was the high concentration of dissolved arsenic
(2.8 µg L–1). The source appears to be
natural sediment mineralogy, and sediment cores were found to be depleted in
arsenic near the sedimentŒwater interface. Overall, the findings
suggested that current heavy metal inputs do not represent a threat to the
health of the bay.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
36 articles.
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