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Journal of Environmental Quality 30:967-981 (2001)
© 2001 American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America

TECHNICAL REPORT
Surface Water Quality

Precipitation and River Water Chemistry of the Piracicaba River Basin, Southeast Brazil

Michael R. Williamsa, Solange Filosoa, Luiz A. Martinellib, Luciene B. Larab and Plínio B. Camargob

a The Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Lab., Woods Hole, MA 02543
b Univ. of São Paulo, Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura, Ave. Centenário 303, CEP 13416-000, Piracicaba, SP, Brazil

Corresponding author (mikewilliams{at}mbl.edu)

Received for publication January 24, 2000. Annual precipitation and river water volumes and chemistry were measured from 1995 to 1998 in a mesoscale agricultural area of southeast Brazil. Precipitation was mildly acidic and solute concentrations were higher in the west than in the east of the basin. Combustion products from biomass burning, automobile exhaust, and industry typically accumulate in the atmosphere from March until October and are responsible for seasonal differences observed in precipitation chemistry. In river waters, the volume-weighted mean (VWM) concentrations of major solutes at 10 sites across the basin were generally lower at upriver than at downriver sampling sites for most solutes. Mass balances for major solutes indicate that, as a regional entity, the Piracicaba River basin was a net sink of H+, PO3-4, and NH+4, and a net source of other solutes. The main stem of the Piracicaba River had a general increase in solute concentrations from upriver to downriver sampling sites. In contrast, NO-3 and NH+4 concentrations increased in the mid-reach sampling sites and decreased due to immobilization or utilization in the mid-reach reservoir, and there was denitrification immediately downriver of this reservoir. Compared with tributaries of the Chesapeake Bay estuary, the Piracicaba River is affected more by point-source inputs of raw sewage and industrial wastes than nonpoint agricultural runoff high in N and P. Inputs of N and C are responsible for a degradation of water quality at downriver sampling sites of the Piracicaba River drainage, and water quality could be considerably improved by augmenting sewage treatment.

Abbreviations: ANC, acid neutralizing capacity • BOD, biological oxygen demand • CSS, coarse suspended solids • DIC, dissolved inorganic carbon • DOC, dissolved organic carbon • FSS, fine suspended solids • SE, standard error • VWM, volume-weighted mean




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Copyright © 2001 by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America.