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  Communication at the NABS Annual meeting, Keystone, 2000
(213) LAND USE AND WATER QUALITY IN STREAMS OF SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN.
J.D. Allan and M.M. Castillo. School of Natural Resources & Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor MI 48109-1115

Nutrient concentrations in river water are significantly influenced by anthropogenic inputs associated with land cover/use and point sources. We quantified seasonal and spatial patterns in the concentrations of nitrate-nitrogen and soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) at 17 sites distributed among tributaries and along the mainstem of the River Raisin, Southeastern Michigan, and also determined land cover, surficial geology, and discharges from waste water treatment plants. Nitrate concentrations increased from headwaters to river mouth, and were highest in spring and in association with high runoff episodes. Mean nitrate concentration correlated strongly with the ratio of agricultural to forested land upstream of the sampling location. Concentrations of SRP also increased markedly from headwaters downstream, and exhibited little seasonal variation other than a modest increase during the summer period of low flow. Geology and phosphorus loading from waste water treatment plants best predicted SRP concentrations. The annual yield of nitrate was consistent with expectations based on land use. Point source loading contributed a negligible fraction of the river's discharge of nitrate and at most one-fourth of its SRP discharge. Compared with findings from headwater sites and other, less altered rivers, nutrient concentrations in this catchment appear strongly influenced by human activity.

Presented at 10:45 AM on Wednesday, May 31, 2000 in Water Quality and Land Use II