Atmospheric deposition of nutrient nitrogen to Galveston Bay, Texas

Date

1999

Authors

Sweet, Stephen, Terry L. Wade, Junesoo Park, David Wylie and Luis Cifuentes

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission

Abstract

Nitrogen compounds can have both beneficial (e.g. soil fertility, plant nutrient) and harmful effects (ozone destruction, greenhouse effect, air pollution, acid rain, acidification and eutrophication of surface waters, contamination of ground water). The EPA took these deleterious effects into account and has a mandate to evaluate and regulate nitrogen compounds under the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, the Drinking Water Act, etc. Beside agricultural and sewage loadings of nitrogen via river and direct discharge, deposition of atmospheric nitrogen is a major fraction of anthropogenic nitrogen loadings to coastal ecosystems. In order to fulfill the mandates of the Great Waters Program and the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (112 m), the US EPA initiated monitoring research in important and representative water bodies, including coastal waters. As part of this program the Texas Regional Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Study (TRIADS) was established with a sampling site located in Seabrook, Texas in order to monitor atmospheric deposition of contaminants to Galveston Bay.

Description

pgs. 265-274

Keywords

nitrogen cycle, nitrogen compounds, nutrients, fertilizers, eutrophication, water analysis, nitrates, nitrites, urea, ammonia, contamination, atmospheric precipitations, river discharge, water analysis

Citation