Transcript
Page 1: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters Stuart Findlay

Vicky Kelly

Where are we now?

Compared to what?

Where are we headed?

Should we be worried?

Page 2: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Acknowledgements• Fishkill Creek Watershed Comm. (R. Oestrike)

• Environmental Management Council (D. Burns, C. Klocker)

• Hudson River NERR (W.C. Nieder, S. Ciparis)

• Town of Clinton CAC (N. Coller)

• Vassar College (K. Menking et al.)

• Syracuse U. (D. Siegel, L. Jin)

• WRI – Cornell; COE - Syracuse

Page 3: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Some Chloride Reference Points• Background - ~ 10 mg/L or less [Catskill Reservoirs]• Sublethal – 50-100 mg/L Subtle yet Significant

– Biotic Indices– Microbial processes– Associations

• EPA Chronic – 230 mg/L• Drinking Water Std – 250 mg/L• EPA Acute – 860 mg/L• Lethal - 1000 or higher

Page 4: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

SIMPLER

• REFERENCE <10 mg/L

• ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS ~ 100 mg/L

• LETHAL > 1000 mg/L

DUTCHESS COUNTY WATERS80 mg/L (+/- 79 SD)

Page 5: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Mullaney et al., USGS

DC

Page 6: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Ten Mile10-40

Crum Elbow15-50

Casperkill100-300

Chloride(mg/L)

Wappinger10-45

Fishkill10-100

Page 7: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

WAPPINGER CREEK JULY 2006

20

30

40

50

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Downstream Increases

DISTANCE FROM MOUTH (km)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Chlo

ride (

mg/L

)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

FISHKILL CREEKSummer 2005

Popul

atio

n

Page 8: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Residential Land Cover and Chloride (M. Essery)

Subwatersheds in the Fishklill Basin

Page 9: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

High concentrations

in summer

0

20

40

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

MONTH

CH

LOR

IDE

(mg/

L)

East Branch Wappinger Creek, Millbrook

No decline in summer concentrations

Page 10: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Long-term increases in concentration

East Branch of the Wappinger Creek

Kelly et al. ES&T 2008

Cl (mg/)

0

10

20

30

40

50

1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009

Page 11: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Saw Kill Creek

HRNERR

• Low-density residential

• Yearly mean Cl-

concentrations have doubled since 1991 (20 to 40 mg/L)

• Similar Cl- concentrations throughout year

Year

1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004

Chl

orid

e (m

g/L)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Page 12: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

All Patterns Suggest a Reservoir

• Soil Sorption or Groundwater?

STREAM

• Road salt biggest source – others?

Page 13: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

SOIL CORES HOLD Cl LONGER THAN WATER

Kincaid and Findlay, 2009

Page 14: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Groundwater ?

05

1015202530354045

25 50 75 100 125 150 175 200 225 More

Chloride (mg/L)

% o

f Sam

ples

WELL

SURF

Fig. 4: Frequency distribution of chloride concentrations in surface and well samples from Dutchess County.

A few wells have Cl > surface water concentration – Could support high baseflow concentrations

Private drinking-water wellsNon-random but widely distributed

Page 15: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

CHLORIDE IS NOT ALONE

0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210

CL (mg/L)

0

4

8

12

16

20

24

NO

3 (

mg/L

)

D. Burns - EMC

Page 16: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Should we be Worried?

• At the brink, trends are not encouraging

• Groundwater concentrations must be increasing

• What else is coming along?

Page 17: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

Scope for Action

• Reduced Salt is in Everyone’s Interest

• Widespread Problem, Lots of Mental Horsepower

• Solutions may Require Capital

Page 18: Salt in Dutchess Co. Waters

What do we Need to Know?Today’s Program

• Environmental Effects – Not Huge Yet but Close?

• Human Health Effects

• Cost – Direct (Salt is cheap, labor is not, use is high)– Indirect (Corrosion, contamination

• Solution?


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