2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11270-020-04504-2
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The Urban Pressure Over the Sediment Contamination in a Southern Brazil Metropolis: the Case of Diluvio Stream

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…However, urbanized Lake Clément has no eutrophication problem, nor a higher abundance of cyanobacteria, yet the composition of its microbial community was more similar to highly urbanized and hyper-eutrophic Lake Saint-Augustin, than to less eutrophic, but also less urbanized Lake Clair and Lake Saint-Charles. This indicates the importance of other factors related to urbanization, such as the road salts, or of other common contaminants of urban watersheds including pharmaceuticals, toxins and metals from wastewater, sewage and roads ( Hong et al, 2018 ; Ondarza et al, 2019 ; Dos Santos et al, 2020 ; Tian et al, 2020 ). While the exact factor, or combination of factors, to which they respond remain uncertain, the results of the present study suggest that an increase in abundance of bloom-forming cyanobacteria, cryptophytes or haptophytes is exacerbated by urbanization and the associated road salt effects.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, urbanized Lake Clément has no eutrophication problem, nor a higher abundance of cyanobacteria, yet the composition of its microbial community was more similar to highly urbanized and hyper-eutrophic Lake Saint-Augustin, than to less eutrophic, but also less urbanized Lake Clair and Lake Saint-Charles. This indicates the importance of other factors related to urbanization, such as the road salts, or of other common contaminants of urban watersheds including pharmaceuticals, toxins and metals from wastewater, sewage and roads ( Hong et al, 2018 ; Ondarza et al, 2019 ; Dos Santos et al, 2020 ; Tian et al, 2020 ). While the exact factor, or combination of factors, to which they respond remain uncertain, the results of the present study suggest that an increase in abundance of bloom-forming cyanobacteria, cryptophytes or haptophytes is exacerbated by urbanization and the associated road salt effects.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5), associated with the elements As, Cd, Cu, Pb, and Zn. Unexplored mineral deposits can pose pollution risks to the aquatic environment (Wang et al, 2006) Anthropogenic sources of potentially toxic elements to the aquatic environment Among the nine anthropogenic sources identi ed in the SLR, mining stood out, occurring in 29 publications, followed by agriculture (26 publications), industries (22), and domestic e uents (19 publications). The tra c source occurred in 13 publications, industrial e uents in 10, atmospheric deposition from polluted areas in 4, hospital e uents in 2 publications, and the waterway transport source occurred in only one publication (Fig.…”
Section: Unexplored Mineral Depositsmentioning
confidence: 99%