Schneider, Petra;
Neitzel, Peter L.;
Schaffrath, Martin;
Schlumprecht, Helmut
Physico‐chemical Assessment of the Reference Status in German Surface Waters: A Contribution to the Establishment of the EC Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EG in Germany
You can manage bookmarks using lists, please log in to your user account for this.
Media type:
E-Article
Title:
Physico‐chemical Assessment of the Reference Status in German Surface Waters: A Contribution to the Establishment of the EC Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EG in Germany
Contributor:
Schneider, Petra;
Neitzel, Peter L.;
Schaffrath, Martin;
Schlumprecht, Helmut
Published:
Wiley, 2003
Published in:
Acta hydrochimica et hydrobiologica, 31 (2003) 1, Seite 49-63
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1002/aheh.200390016
ISSN:
0323-4320;
1521-401X
Origination:
Footnote:
Description:
AbstractFor the establishment of the EC Water Framework Directive in Germany the physico‐chemical reference conditions of surface waters in Germany had to be determined. The results of the statistical analysis of 3500 data sets of 31 surface water catchment types show that water body types can be aggregated to bogs and bog riverside meadows, saliniferous type, carbonatic‐dolomitic type, sandy‐clayey type, silicatic type, and metallogenic type. The data base allows an assessment of the plausibility of the surface water quality classification and quality targets of the LAWA (Länderarbeitsgemeinschaft Wasser). The investigated reference status of the natural surface waters for the considered elements in the suspended particulate matter, except in metallogenic landscapes, corresponds to the water quality class I of the LAWA. The reference conditions of cadmium and mercury in the total water phase are significantly higher than the quality targets of the LAWA. The evaluated reference data of the other physico‐chemical parameters in the total water phase show, that assessable physico‐chemical parameters refer to a quality class of I, mainly and quality class II, locally. Mainly, the data reached the quality targets of the LAWA. In spite of the hard evaluation criteria to separate reference sites a special enrichment of nitrate and cadmium was found in many German surface water reference catchment types.