Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Submarine wastewater discharges: dispersion modelling in the Northern Adriatic Sea

  • Research Article
  • Published:
Environmental Science and Pollution Research Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Background, aim and scope

Opposite interests must coexist in coastal areas: the presence of significant cities and urban centres, of touristic and recreational areas, and of extensive shellfish farming. To avoid local pollution caused by treated wastewaters along the Northern Adriatic coast (Friuli Venezia-Giulia and Veneto regions), marine outfall systems have been constructed. In this study, the application of a numerical dispersion model is used to support the traditional monitoring methods in order to link information concerning the hydrodynamic circulation and the microbiological features, to evaluate possible health risks associated with recreational and coastal shellfish farming activities. The study is a preliminary analysis of the environmental impact of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) with submarine discharge outfalls. It also could be useful for the water profile definition according to the Directive 2006/7/EC on the quality of bathing water and for the integrated areal analysis (Ostoich et al. 2006), to define the area of influence of each submarine discharge point.

Materials and methods

Historical data on discharges of the considered WWTPs were recovered and evaluated. Data on discharges’ control for Veneto region (WWTPs of Lido and Cavallino) were produced by the WWTPs’ manager Veritas Laboratory service, while data for the WWTPs of Friuli Venezia-Giulia region were produced by the regional environmental protection agency in the institutional control activity following official methods. The hydrodynamic model used in this work is the three-dimensional version of the finite element model SHYFEM, developed at ISMAR-CNR (Marine Science Institute of the Italian National Research Council) in Venice (Umgiesser et al. J Mar Syst 51:123–145, 2008).

Results and discussion

Numerical simulations have been carried out with the 3D version of the finite element model SHYFEM for 3 months during autumn 2007 to evaluate the bacterial pollution dispersion along the coasts of Veneto and Friuli Venezia-Giulia regions, prescribing meteo-marine forcings and concentration values at the points corresponding to the positions of the submarine outfalls. Model results show that during autumn 2007 the discharges of the submarine outfalls of the Venice province seem to have no impact on the surface water quality, while there are some visible effects in the Gulf of Trieste. This reflects the behaviour of the experimental data collected by ARPAV and ARPA FVG and monitoring campaigns both on water and shellfish quality. Further results have been elaborated to identify the area of influence of each discharge point; scenarios were developed with imposed concentrations. The results seem to highlight that the two discharges of the Veneto region are not noticeable, while the discharges of the Gulf of Trieste (in particular the Servola and Barcola ones) are perceptible.

Conclusions

This study represents a new step towards the study of the microbiological pollution dispersion and impact due to the discharges of the submarine outfalls of the Veneto and Friuli Venezia-Giulia regions (nine considered discharge points). With the 3D version of the finite element model SHYFEM, the information obtained from the hydrodynamic circulation has been linked to the classical methods of analysis, to assess possible risks connected to the microbiological parameter Escherichia coli.

Recommendations and perspectives

In future studies the time scale for microbiological parameters’ decay could be linked to various environmental parameters such as light climate, temperature, and salinity. Interesting information would come from the study of new scenarios with different configurations of the discharge of the pipelines and/or the treatment plants and in particular from the improvements of the 3D version of the SHYFEM model, to take the stratification process into account which occurs during spring–summer, since the Northern Adriatic Sea is a very complex ecosystem, both as physical and ecological processes.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7
Fig. 8
Fig. 9

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • APAT-Italian National Environmental Protection Agency APAT (2003) Analytical methods for water. Vol. 3, n. 29/2003, Rome [http://www.apat.gov.it/site/it-IT/APAT/Pubblicazioni/Manuali_e_linee_guida/]

  • Crane SR, Moore JA (1986) Modelling enteric bacterial die-off: a review. Water Air Soil Pollut 27:411–439

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cucco A, Umgiesser G (2006) Modeling the Venice Lagoon residence time. Ecol Modell 193(1–2):34–51

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Donnison AM, Ross CM (1999) Animal and human faecal pollution in New Zealand rivers. NZ J Mar Freshwat Res 33:119–128

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • European Community: Directive 2000/60/EC 23/10/2000, establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy, OJ of the European Communities 22/12/2000 n. L 327 (2000).

  • European Community: Directive 2006/7/EC 15/02/2006, concerning the management of bathing water quality and repealing Directive 76/160/EEC, OJ of the European Communities 4/03/2006 n. L 64 (2006).

  • Evison LM (1988) Comparative studies on the survival of indicator organisms and pathogens in fresh and sea water. Water Sci Technol 20(11/12):309–315

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Glasoe S., Christy A. (2004) Coastal Urbanization and Microbial Contamination of Shellfish Growing Areas. PSAT04-09, State of Washington, Olympia Washington. [http://www.psat.wa.gov/Programs/shellfish/sf_lit_review0604.pdf]

  • Italian Decree 8/06/1982, n. 470 Bathing waters, Italian O.J. n. 203 26/07/1982.

  • Italian Decree 3/04/2006 n. 152 Environmental regulations, Ord. Suppl. N. 96/L to the Italian OJ 14/04/2006 n. 88; 2006

  • Mancini JL (1978) Numerical estimates of Coliform mortality rates under various conditions. Journal of the water pollution control federation 50:2477–2484

    Google Scholar 

  • Mattassi G, Scroccaro I, Umgiesser G, Colugnati L, Ostoich M, Vazzoler M, Cuomo M (2008) Dispersion modeling of submarine wastewater discharges in the Northern Adriatic sea along Friuli Venezia-Giulia and Veneto regions’ coasts MWWD 2008—5th International Conference on Marine Waste Water Disposal and Marine Environment, Dubrovnik, 27-31/10/2008.

  • Meays CL, Broersma K, Nordin R, Mazumder A (2004) Source tracking faecal bacteria in water: a critical review of current methods. J Environ Manag 73:71–79

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Miglioranza KSB, Aizpun de Moreno JE, Moreno VJ (2004) Land-based sources of marine pollution: organochlorine pesticides in stream systems (6 pp). Environ Sci Pollut Res 11(4):227–232

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Mosetti F (1972) Alcune ricerche sulle correnti nel Golfo di Trieste. Riv Ital Geof 21:33–38

    Google Scholar 

  • Noble RT, Fuhrman JA (2001) Enteroviruses detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction from the coastal waters of Santa Monica Bay, California: low correlation to bacterial indicators. Hydrobiologia 460(1–3):175–184

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Noble RT, Moore DF, Leecaster MK, McGee CD, Weisberg SB (2003) Comparison of Total Coliform, Fecal Coliform, and Enterococcus Bacterial Indicator Response for Ocean Recreational Water Quality Testing. Water Research, 37:1637–1643 [available at http://ftp.sccwrp.org/pub/download/PDFs/383_micro_indicator.pdf]

  • Ostoich M, Aimo E, Vazzoler M, Boscolo F, Umgiesser G, Scroccaro I (2006) Biological pollution caused by wastewaters from public treatment plants in the Venice province (Italy-Northern Adriatic sea): integrated areal analysis with modelling applications on the coastal zone, MWWD-IEMES 2006 4th International Conference on Marine Waste Water Disposal and Marine Environment-Antalya, Sept. 25–29, 2006 [available on: http://www.mwwd.org].

  • Rose JB, Atlas RM, Gerba CP, Gilchrist MJR, LeChevallier MW, Sobsey MD, Yates MV, Cassell GH, Tiedje JM (1999) Microbial Pollutants in our Nation’s Water: Environmental and Public Health Issues. American Society for Microbiology, Washington, [http://www.asm.org/ASM/files/CCPAGECONTENT/DOCFILENAME/0000005987/waterreport[1].pdf].

  • Schmidt S (2003) International standardization of water analysis: basis for comparative assessment of water quality. Environ Sci Pollut Res 10(3):183–187

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Scroccaro I, Cucco A, Umgiesser G, Osti P (2005) Numerical simulations of the bacterial pollution along the coast of the Venice province (Northern Adriatic). Proceedings of ICCCM05, Tavira, Algarve, Portugal pp 17–20

  • Sinton LW, Donnison AM, Hastie CM (1993) Faecal streptococci as faecal pollution indicators: a review. Part II: Sanitary significance, survival and use. N.Z. J Mar Freshw Res 27:117–137

    Google Scholar 

  • Stravisi F, Pieri G, Berger P (1981) Golfo di Trieste: risultati delle misure correntometriche 1951–1954. Boll Soc Adr Sc 65:23–35

    Google Scholar 

  • Umgiesser G, Melaku Canu D, Cucco A, Solidoro C (2004) A finite element model for the Venice Lagoon. Development, set up, calibration and validation. J Mar Syst 51:123–145

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Umgiesser G, Mattassi G, Scroccaro I, Ostoich M, Vazzoler M (2008) The use of numerical modeling in Italian watershed management. IE Gönenç et al. (eds) Sustainable Use and Development of Watersheds, 243–261.© Springer Science + Business Media B.V.

  • Umgiesser G (2000) Modeling residual currents in the Venice Lagoon. In: Yanagi, T. (Ed.), Interactions between Estuaries,Coastal Seas and Shelf Seas Tokio: Terra Scientific Publishing Company (TERRAPUB), JP, 107-124-

Download references

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to acknowledge the ARPAV and ARPA FVG personnel of the Laboratory Services and VERITAS Laboratory service for the analytical activities on WWTPs’ discharges. In particular the authors wish to thank Dr. Enio Decorte of ARPA FVG and Dr. Paola Miana of VERITAS for the kind collaboration, the Meteorological Observatory (OSMER) of ARPA FVG for the ECMWF data, the Hydrographic Regional Office and Eng. Aldo Primiero of the Regional Civil Defence of Friuli Venezia-Giulia for the river data and Dr. Pietro Rossin of ARPA FVG for the bathymetric and coastline data.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Marco Ostoich.

Additional information

Responsible editor: Piotr Stepnowski

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Scroccaro, I., Ostoich, M., Umgiesser, G. et al. Submarine wastewater discharges: dispersion modelling in the Northern Adriatic Sea. Environ Sci Pollut Res 17, 844–855 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-009-0273-7

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-009-0273-7

Keywords

Navigation