2004 Denver Annual Meeting (November 7–10, 2004)

Paper No. 14
Presentation Time: 11:30 AM

MODELING PHOSPHORUS TRANSPORT TO STREAMS FROM SEPTIC SYSTEMS IN A DEVELOPED MOUNTAIN WATERSHED


MCCRAY, John E., Jackson School of Geosciences, Univ of Texas, The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station C1100, Austin, TX 78712-0254 and LEMONDS, Paula Jo, HDR Inc, 2211 South IH-35, Suite 300, Austin, TX 78741, mccray@mail.utexas.edu

Eutrophication of Dillon Reservoir (Summit County, Colorado) is a concern, primarily from phosphorus (P) loading. The reservoir, at the mouth of within the Blue River Watershed, is a primary drinking-water reservoir for Denver. Local officials have attributed the P loading to onsite wastewater systems (OWS). The watershed model, SWAT, is used to construct a hydrologic and transport model of the Blue River watershed to better understand the potential influence of various point and nonpoint sources of P in the watershed. The watershed model was calibrated to measured flow rates and the model’s performance with respect to pollutant transport was evaluated by comparing results to measured P concentrations. The hydrogeologic model results are most sensitive to the physical parameters associated with snowmelt, as well as orographic effects on precipitation and evapotranspiration. However, uncertainties in chemical-transport parameters preclude a rigorous assignment of relative contributions of various P sources. Rather, the effort has elucidated what P transport parameters that are most crucial to accurate simulations for this watershed. The model was most sensitive to the P sorption coefficient, the P availability index, and the P enrichment ratio (a measure of P in runoff sediments compared to immobile sediments). Modeling results indicate that OWS are likely not the most significant sources of P to Lake Dillon. Rather, runoff of P-laden into the stream is the more likely cause of P loading.