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Auteurs principaux: Kilgour, Clare L, Winter, Carley E, Brauner, Colin J, Chará-Serna, Ana M, James, Alan C, Kroetsch, Nicola C, Schulte, Patricia M, Wood, Chris M
Format: Artículo científico
Langue:en
Publié: Archives of environmental contamination and toxicology 2025
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Accès en ligne:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40996551/
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author Kilgour, Clare L
Winter, Carley E
Brauner, Colin J
Chará-Serna, Ana M
James, Alan C
Kroetsch, Nicola C
Schulte, Patricia M
Wood, Chris M
author_facet Kilgour, Clare L
Winter, Carley E
Brauner, Colin J
Chará-Serna, Ana M
James, Alan C
Kroetsch, Nicola C
Schulte, Patricia M
Wood, Chris M
Kilgour, Clare L
Winter, Carley E
Brauner, Colin J
Chará-Serna, Ana M
James, Alan C
Kroetsch, Nicola C
Schulte, Patricia M
Wood, Chris M
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Tracking Road Salt Contamination Through Community Monitoring: Annual Surface Water Chloride Trends in Streams of a Major Urban Area, the Vancouver Lower Mainland, B.C., Canada. Kilgour, Clare L Winter, Carley E Brauner, Colin J Chará-Serna, Ana M James, Alan C Kroetsch, Nicola C Schulte, Patricia M Wood, Chris M Environmental Monitoring Rivers British Columbia Water Pollutants, Chemical Chlorides Seasons Animals Cities Urban freshwater streams across northern latitudes are undergoing increasing salinization due, in part, to road salt inputs during winter months. Road salt contamination has been monitored across Canada for over 40 years; however, the scale of contamination in the Pacific Northwest, which experiences relatively mild and rainy winters, is not well understood. A network of almost 40 water quality loggers in the Lower Mainland of Vancouver, B.C., Canada (VLM) was leveraged to better understand the scale of road salt inputs to local streams and identify factors that influence the magnitude and occurrence of these contamination events. Specific conductance data from these loggers indicate that road salt is entering creeks, resulting in brief salt pulses that typically last 1 day or less. Road salt pulses occur as frequently as three times per week in winter months and can attain maximum chloride concentrations above British Columbia's acute guideline for chloride (600 mg/L Cl) by as much as 11-fold in streams. The amount of road salt entering creeks is influenced by the extent of impervious surface in the surrounding catchment basin, with more urbanized creeks receiving higher inputs. Interestingly, cumulative salt inputs do not correlate with winter severity and remain consistent even during mild winters. Acute pulses of road salt occur in VLM streams between November and March, coinciding with the spawning and incubation period of locally important Pacific salmon species such as coho and chum salmon. This timing poses a direct risk to developing salmonids, and the benthic invertebrates which sustain them later in development.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40996551
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Archives of environmental contamination and toxicology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Tracking Road Salt Contamination Through Community Monitoring: Annual Surface Water Chloride Trends in Streams of a Major Urban Area, the Vancouver Lower Mainland, B.C., Canada.
Kilgour, Clare L
Winter, Carley E
Brauner, Colin J
Chará-Serna, Ana M
James, Alan C
Kroetsch, Nicola C
Schulte, Patricia M
Wood, Chris M
Environmental Monitoring
Rivers
British Columbia
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Chlorides
Seasons
Animals
Cities
Tracking Road Salt Contamination Through Community Monitoring: Annual Surface Water Chloride Trends in Streams of a Major Urban Area, the Vancouver Lower Mainland, B.C., Canada. Kilgour, Clare L Winter, Carley E Brauner, Colin J Chará-Serna, Ana M James, Alan C Kroetsch, Nicola C Schulte, Patricia M Wood, Chris M Environmental Monitoring Rivers British Columbia Water Pollutants, Chemical Chlorides Seasons Animals Cities Urban freshwater streams across northern latitudes are undergoing increasing salinization due, in part, to road salt inputs during winter months. Road salt contamination has been monitored across Canada for over 40 years; however, the scale of contamination in the Pacific Northwest, which experiences relatively mild and rainy winters, is not well understood. A network of almost 40 water quality loggers in the Lower Mainland of Vancouver, B.C., Canada (VLM) was leveraged to better understand the scale of road salt inputs to local streams and identify factors that influence the magnitude and occurrence of these contamination events. Specific conductance data from these loggers indicate that road salt is entering creeks, resulting in brief salt pulses that typically last 1 day or less. Road salt pulses occur as frequently as three times per week in winter months and can attain maximum chloride concentrations above British Columbia's acute guideline for chloride (600 mg/L Cl) by as much as 11-fold in streams. The amount of road salt entering creeks is influenced by the extent of impervious surface in the surrounding catchment basin, with more urbanized creeks receiving higher inputs. Interestingly, cumulative salt inputs do not correlate with winter severity and remain consistent even during mild winters. Acute pulses of road salt occur in VLM streams between November and March, coinciding with the spawning and incubation period of locally important Pacific salmon species such as coho and chum salmon. This timing poses a direct risk to developing salmonids, and the benthic invertebrates which sustain them later in development.
title Tracking Road Salt Contamination Through Community Monitoring: Annual Surface Water Chloride Trends in Streams of a Major Urban Area, the Vancouver Lower Mainland, B.C., Canada.
topic Environmental Monitoring
Rivers
British Columbia
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Chlorides
Seasons
Animals
Cities
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40996551/