Urban swamp syndrome : degradation of a high conservation-value swamp from an urban catchment

Nakia Belmer, Ian A. Wright, Carl Tippler

Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

Abstract

![CDATA[This study investigates water quality and aquatic invertebrates within two Blue Mountains Upland Swamps on two occasions. One swamp received catchment runoff from a recently upgraded highway in a partly urbanised catchment. The second swamp drains a nearby undisturbed and naturally vegetated catchment. Water chemistry indicates that the swamp receiving urban runoff had major differences in water geochemistry compared to the non-urban swamp with six times higher salinity, pH 2 units higher and highly modified ionic composition dominated by sulfate, bicarbonate and calcium. The natural swamp stream was dominated by sodium and chloride ions. Stream macroinvertebrate samples taken from both swamps revealed significant ecological differences. These results show the swamp receiving highway runoff is suffering from the ‘urban stream syndrome’, perhaps this could be termed the ‘urban swamp syndrome’? Further research is required to investigate measures required to protect such sensitive swamps of high conservation value from the continuing urban development of the area.]]
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 8th Australian Stream Management Conference: 31 July - 3 August 2016, Leura, New South Wales
PublisherRiver Basin Management Society
Pages520-528
Number of pages9
ISBN (Print)9780734052988
Publication statusPublished - 2016
EventAustralian Stream Management Conference -
Duration: 31 Jul 2016 → …

Conference

ConferenceAustralian Stream Management Conference
Period31/07/16 → …

Keywords

  • urban runoff
  • swamps
  • environmental sciences
  • water pollution
  • water quality
  • aquatic invertebrates
  • Blue Mountains
  • New South Wales
  • Australia
  • Centre for Western Sydney
  • environment and sustainability

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