Experts take part in research into UK river pollution
FIVE new research projects including one in Bristol will investigate how pollution impacts UK rivers.
Freshwater ecosystems are facing multiple pressures from pollutants, including chemicals, microplastics, pharmaceuticals, invasive species and land management practices.
UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) says that as a result, the majority of UK rivers fail to have good ecological status.
Only 14% of waterways in England, 46% in Wales, 50% in Scotland and 31% in Northern Ireland reach the threshold.
Poor water quality can result in loss of life in the rivers, threaten the structure and stability of the food chain, be dangerous for bathing and lead to enhanced drinking water treatment needs and costs.
Researchers have been awarded funding by Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and Defra from the £8.4 million Understanding Changes in Quality of UK Freshwaters programme. They will investigate how pollutants enter, leave and interact with rivers and supporting ecosystems.
The study will also determine how the movement of pollutants will be modified with changes in the water cycle, and work towards creating better tools to monitor pollution.
As well as studying how climate change impacts water quality in rivers, the projects will look at how concentrations of multiple chemicals vary in freshwaters, using nine field catchments in Yorkshire Rivers Aire, Calder, Derwent, Don, Nidd, Ouse, Swale, Ure and Wharfe.
Research on the River Thames and Bristol Avon field sites will examine how freshwater pollutants affect aquatic invertebrates and plants.
Studies across Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and north and west England will look at how livestock farming changes UK water quality.
A River Almond site in Scotland will investigate how interactions will occur between changes in climate and land use, and emergent contaminants in rivers.
The programme’s Freshwater Quality Champions, Professor Pippa Chapman and Professor Joseph Holden, from the University of Leeds, said: “Through collaboration between researchers, water and land managers and policy-makers, the programme will help ensure our rivers and waterways are more resilient to future climate and land-use change.”