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Chemical Constituents in Storm Flow vs. Dry Weather Discharges in California Storm Water Conveyances
Journal article

Chemical Constituents in Storm Flow vs. Dry Weather Discharges in California Storm Water Conveyances

L. Donald Duke, Thomas S Lo and Michelle W Turner
Journal of the American Water Resources Association, Vol.35(4), pp.821-836
08-1999

Abstract

metals pollutants seasonal water quality variation stormwater management urban runoff dry weather discharge water quality monitoring Nonpoint Source Pollution
This research evaluated concentration data for selected water quality parameters in selected California urban separate storm sewer systems during storm event discharges and during dry weather conditions. We used existing monitoring data from multiple regulatory agencies and municipalities originally collected for compliance or local characterization, which allowed systematic assessment of seasonal patterns over a wide region. Long term mean concentration for most parameters in most streams was higher during storm discharges than during dry weather flows to at least 95 percent confidence in 20 of 45 comparative evaluations, and lower statistical confidence in 22 other comparisons. Some regional differences emerged: in four evaluated streams in the San Francisco Bay Area, total concentration of lead, copper and zinc were lower during dry weather than during storm flows to at least 99.9 percent confidence, with only one exception; while the other four evaluated California streams showed the same tendency, but to much lower statistical confidence.

Metrics

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: SDGs in the Output

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