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  Journal > Table of Contents > Volume 3 Issue 3 > Abstract
 


Ecotoxicological assessment in the rivers Rhine (The Netherlands) and Po (Italy)


M. Camusso
a, D. Vignatib,c, C. van de Guchteb

aWater Research institute (IRSA-CNR), Via della Mornera 25, 20047 Brugherio (Mi), ItalybInstitute for Inland Water Management and Waste Water Treatment, RIZA, P.O. Box 17, 8200 AA Lelystad, The NetherlandscFondazione Lombardia per l'Ambiente, Foro Bonaparte 12, 20121 Milan, Italy

Abstract

  This paper compares several aspects of water and sediment pollution in the Rhine and Po rivers. The data were selected from previously published material following criteria that considered natural differences between the two river basins and also differences in the experimental approaches employed. One aim of the comparison was to highlight differences in approach between the Italian and Dutch water authorities and to assess the advantages of standardising methodologies for water quality assessment between Italy, The Netherlands, and other member countries of the European Union.
  Water quality in the Po and the Rhine was found to be similar; levels of trace metals, with the exception of copper, were below current environmentally acceptable targets, and the toxicity of water extracts to water fleas were closely similar. The main problem in both basins was diffuse inputs of nutrients and biocides from agriculture.
  By contrast, there were considerable differences between the rivers in terms of sediment contamination, which was much worse In the Rhine. Potentially dangerous levels of organochlorides were found in sediments from both rivers, yet concentrations were much higher in Rhine sediments, particularly in the deltaic area, which contained very high levels of certain trace metals and polyaromatic hydrocarbons.
  It is concluded that the two rivers share many environmental quality problems, and that harmonisation of experimental and monitoring procedures between the two rivers would not only assist research but promote more efficient management policies. © 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd and AEHMS. All rights reserved.

Keywords: Trace metals; Micropollutants; Nutrients; Sediments; Bioaccumulation


Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management: 3(3); 335-346
 

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