Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2740
Citation Smith T. B. and Owens P. N. (2014) Individual and cumulative effects of agriculture, forestry and metal mining activities on the metal and phosphorus content of fluvial fine-grained sediment; Quesnel River Basin, British Columbia, Canada. Science of the Total Environment 496 DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.07.014
Organization University of Northern British Columbia
URL http://www.unbc.ca/sites/default/files/sections/quesnel-river-research-centre/smith-ps16.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords The impact of agriculture, forestry and metal mining on the quality of fine-grained sediment (b63 _m) was investigated in the Quesnel River Basin (QRB) (~11,500 km2) in British Columbia, Canada. Samples of finegrained sediment were collected monthly during the snow-free season in 2008 using time-integrated samplers at replicate sites representative of agriculture, forestry and mining activities in the basin (i.e. “impacted” sites). Samples were also collected from replicate reference sites and also from the main stem of the Quesnel River at the downstream confluence with the Fraser River. Generally, metal(loid) and phosphorus (P) concentrations for “impacted” sites were greater than for reference sites. Furthermore, concentrations of copper (forestry and mining sites), manganese (agriculture and forestry sites) and selenium (agriculture, forestry and mining sites) exceeded upper sediment quality guideline (SQG) thresholds. These results suggest that agriculture, forestry and metal mining activities are having an influence on the concentrations of sediment-associated metal(loid)s and P in the Quesnel basin. Metal(loid) and P concentrations of sediment collected from the downstream site were not significantly greater than values for the reference sites, and were typically lower than the values for the impacted sites. This suggests that the cumulative effects of agriculture, forestry and mining activities in the QRB are presently not having a measureable effect at the river basin-scale. The lack of a cumulative effect at the basin-scale is thought to reflect: (i) the relatively recent occurrence of land use disturbances in this basin; (ii) the dominance of sediment contributions from natural forest and agriculture; and (iii) the potential for storage of contaminants on floodplains and other storage elements between the locations of disturbance activities and the downstreamsampling site, which may be attenuating the disturbance signal. Suspended sediment; Contaminants; Metals and metalloids; Cumulative effects; Sediment ad water quality; Environmental stressors
Information Type Article
Regional Watershed Quesnel River
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status
Contact Name Philip Owens
Contact Email [email protected]