Recovery of an urbanised estuary: clean-up, de-industrialisation and restoration of redundant dock-basins in the Mersey
Recovery of an urbanised estuary: clean-up, de-industrialisation and restoration of redundant dock-basins in the Mersey
For much of the 20th century, the Mersey in North West England was one of the worst polluted estuaries in Europe. Water from a range of polluting industries plus domestic sewage was discharged into the Mersey Catchment and Estuary. Recovery came through a concerted clean-up campaign and tightening environmental regulations, partly driven by European Commission Directives, coupled with de-industrialisation from the 1970s onward. Recovery of oxygen levels in the Estuary led to the return of a productive ecosystem. This led to conservation designations, but also concerns about transfer of pollutants to higher trophic levels in fish, birds and humans. As part of urban renewal, ecosystems in disused dock basins were restored using mussel biofiltration and artificial de-stratification, facilitating commercial redevelopment and creation of a tourist destination. The degradation and recovery of the Mersey from peak-pollution in the mid-20th century is put in the context of wider environmental change and briefly compared to other systems to develop a hysteresis model of degradation and recovery, often to novel ecosystems.
Biodiversity, Conservation, Contamination, Disused docks, Liverpool, Pollution
Hawkins, S.J.
758fe1c1-30cd-4ed1-bb65-2471dc7c11fa
O'shaughnessy, K.A.
213a39eb-6ba0-4e49-a931-c219cda7eb08
Adams, L.A.
2be50723-3824-4a3d-829e-678b47a98564
Langston, W.J.
ce659bcd-82e0-41bf-b382-0058d9925ceb
Bray, S.
f6790aaf-2a71-4ca3-a32e-589e88076965
Allen, J.R.
ff31e42d-f0eb-4703-81ac-827f85f8d2bf
Wilkinson, S.
515fffa9-1b52-4208-9898-563773dda70a
Bohn, K.
aa4c1203-9331-47ee-b9e2-65f6adbddb70
Mieszkowska, N.
4c91117c-a01f-46a6-81c7-68ef16cbd598
Firth, L.B.
2e186fef-ae70-4fc8-8f3f-34e0073eff9a
1 July 2020
Hawkins, S.J.
758fe1c1-30cd-4ed1-bb65-2471dc7c11fa
O'shaughnessy, K.A.
213a39eb-6ba0-4e49-a931-c219cda7eb08
Adams, L.A.
2be50723-3824-4a3d-829e-678b47a98564
Langston, W.J.
ce659bcd-82e0-41bf-b382-0058d9925ceb
Bray, S.
f6790aaf-2a71-4ca3-a32e-589e88076965
Allen, J.R.
ff31e42d-f0eb-4703-81ac-827f85f8d2bf
Wilkinson, S.
515fffa9-1b52-4208-9898-563773dda70a
Bohn, K.
aa4c1203-9331-47ee-b9e2-65f6adbddb70
Mieszkowska, N.
4c91117c-a01f-46a6-81c7-68ef16cbd598
Firth, L.B.
2e186fef-ae70-4fc8-8f3f-34e0073eff9a
Hawkins, S.J., O'shaughnessy, K.A., Adams, L.A., Langston, W.J., Bray, S., Allen, J.R., Wilkinson, S., Bohn, K., Mieszkowska, N. and Firth, L.B.
(2020)
Recovery of an urbanised estuary: clean-up, de-industrialisation and restoration of redundant dock-basins in the Mersey.
Marine Pollution Bulletin, 156, [111150].
(doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2020.111150).
Abstract
For much of the 20th century, the Mersey in North West England was one of the worst polluted estuaries in Europe. Water from a range of polluting industries plus domestic sewage was discharged into the Mersey Catchment and Estuary. Recovery came through a concerted clean-up campaign and tightening environmental regulations, partly driven by European Commission Directives, coupled with de-industrialisation from the 1970s onward. Recovery of oxygen levels in the Estuary led to the return of a productive ecosystem. This led to conservation designations, but also concerns about transfer of pollutants to higher trophic levels in fish, birds and humans. As part of urban renewal, ecosystems in disused dock basins were restored using mussel biofiltration and artificial de-stratification, facilitating commercial redevelopment and creation of a tourist destination. The degradation and recovery of the Mersey from peak-pollution in the mid-20th century is put in the context of wider environmental change and briefly compared to other systems to develop a hysteresis model of degradation and recovery, often to novel ecosystems.
Text
Recovery_of_an_urbanised_estuary_Hawkins_et_al._MS_26_March_DRAFT
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
Recovery of an urbanised estuary_Hawkins et al._MS - 26 March - DRAFT
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 2 April 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 May 2020
Published date: 1 July 2020
Keywords:
Biodiversity, Conservation, Contamination, Disused docks, Liverpool, Pollution
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 442068
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442068
ISSN: 0025-326X
PURE UUID: 3b0aca0e-ea77-4a6c-990e-a6bd819271a9
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 06 Jul 2020 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:40
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
K.A. O'shaughnessy
Author:
L.A. Adams
Author:
W.J. Langston
Author:
S. Bray
Author:
J.R. Allen
Author:
S. Wilkinson
Author:
K. Bohn
Author:
N. Mieszkowska
Author:
L.B. Firth
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics