Urban geochemical contamination of Highland Peat Wetlands of very high ecological and First Nations cultural value

Ian A. Wright, Holly Nettle, Uncle David King, Michael J.M. Franklin, Amy Marie Gilpin

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Abstract

Temperate Highland Peat Swamps on Sandstone (THPSS) are wetlands in the Blue Mountains, south-eastern Australia. The wetlands have legislative protection as endangered ecological communities. They have long-standing cultural significance for Gundungurra Traditional Custodians. Previous studies document their degradation by urban development and vulnerability to extreme weather. Water quality in our study was assessed at wetlands in protected areas and compared with others exposed to urban development. We derived water quality guidelines that are intended to help future water quality assessment at THPSS and, in particular, to detect any impact from urban development on these wetland systems. Water quality in urban swamps was consistent with the freshwater salinisation syndrome despite all the swamps having relatively low electrical conductance (<140 µS cm−1). Urban swamp water had salinity (mean 87.3 µS cm−1) three times that of non-urban swamps (mean 28 µS cm−1). The ionic composition of urban swamp water was dominated by calcium and bicarbonate, consistent with urban alkalisation syndrome. Our guidelines instead recommend limits for pH, salinity, turbidity, dissolved oxygen, and metals detected in greater concentrations that were found in urban swamps (iron, manganese, barium, and strontium). Our results support the theory that the dissolution of urban concrete materials is a degradation process that contributes to the impairment of urban swamp water quality.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2385
Number of pages19
JournalWater (Switzerland)
Volume17
Issue number16
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2025

Keywords

  • cultural significance
  • freshwater salinisation syndrome
  • impervious surfaces
  • ionic pollution
  • urban concrete dissolution
  • urban stream syndrome

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