4.7 Article

No widespread signature of the COVID-19 quarantine period on water quality across a spectrum of coastal systems in the United States of America

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 807, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150825

Keywords

COVID-19; Coastal; Water quality; Bacteria; Dissolved oxygen; Turbidity

Funding

  1. Texas Sea Grant [NA18OAR4170088]
  2. Texas General Land Office [20-226-000]
  3. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Education Educational Partnership Program award [NA16SEC4810009]
  4. U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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During the COVID-19 quarantine period, some highly impacted coastal regions saw a localized reduction in fecal indicator bacteria, while less impacted regions showed no widespread improvement in water quality. The study emphasizes the ephemeral nature of coastal water quality improvements during the quarantine period, which are mainly reserved for the most severely affected systems.
During the recent COVID-19 related quarantine period, anecdotal evidence emerged pointing to a rapid, sharp improvement in water quality in some localities. Here we present results from an analysis of the impacts of the COVID-19 quarantine period using two long-term coastal water quality datasets. These datasets rely on sampling that operates at appropriate timescales to quantify the influence of reduced human activity on coastal water quality and span coastal ecosystems ranging from low human influence to highly urbanized systems. We tested two hypotheses: 1) reduced tourism during the COVID-19 quarantine period would lead to improved coastal water quality, and 2) water quality improvements would scale to the level of human influence, meaning that highly urbanized or tourist-centric watersheds would see greater improvement than more rural watersheds. A localized reduction in fecal indicator bacteria was observed in four highly impacted regions of the Texas (USA) coast, but this pattern was not widespread. In less impacted regions, the signature of natural, decadal environmental variability (e.g., dissolved oxygen and turbidity) overwhelmed any potential signature of reduced human activity. Results from this study add to the growing body of literature on the environmental impacts of the COVID-19 quarantine period, and when considered with existing literature, emphasize that coastal water quality improvements appear to be ephemeral and reserved for the most severely affected (by human activity) systems. Furthermore, results show the importance of assessing COVID-19 signatures against long-term, decadal datasets that adequately reveal a system's natural variation. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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