Journal
WATER
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13030375
Keywords
Great Lakes; Lake Ontario; modeling; bioavailable phosphorus; nuisance algal growth; Cladophora; trophic state management
Categories
Funding
- Michigan Technological University [01-2013-2019]
- Town of Ajax, Ontario
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The study demonstrates that high phosphorus concentrations stimulate excessive growth of Cladophora in Lake Ontario, causing various issues. Simulation results show that phosphorus removal by chemically enhanced secondary treatment is inadequate in alleviating nuisance conditions, while tertiary treatment with chemically enhanced secondary treatment and ballasted flocculation can eliminate phosphorus-saturated conditions associated with the Duffin Creek wastewater treatment plant effluent, providing local relief from nuisance conditions.
The filamentous green alga Cladophora grows to nuisance proportions in Lake Ontario. Stimulated by high phosphorus concentrations, nuisance growth results in the degradation of beaches and clogging of industrial water intakes with attendant loss of beneficial uses. We develop a multi-module bioavailable phosphorus model to examine the efficacy of phosphorus management strategies in mitigating nuisance algal growth. The model platform includes modules simulating hydrodynamics (FVCOM), phosphorus-phytoplankton dynamics (GEM) and Cladophora growth (GLCMv3). The model is applied along a 25 km stretch of the Lake Ontario nearshore, extending east from Toronto, ON and receiving effluent from three wastewater treatment plants. Simulation results identify the Duffin Creek wastewater treatment plant effluent as a driving force for nuisance conditions of Cladophora growth, as reflected in effluent bioavailable phosphorus concentrations and the dimensions of the plant's phosphorus footprint. Simulation results demonstrate that phosphorus removal by chemically enhanced secondary treatment is insufficient to provide relief from nuisance conditions. Tertiary treatment (chemically enhanced secondary treatment with ballasted flocculation) is shown to eliminate phosphorus-saturated conditions associated with the Duffin Creek wastewater treatment plant effluent, providing local relief from nuisance conditions. Management guidance presented here has wider application at sites along the highly urbanized Canadian nearshore of Lake Ontario.
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