The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Nutrient fluxes through the Humber estuary - past, present and future

Nutrient fluxes through the Humber estuary - past, present and future
Nutrient fluxes through the Humber estuary - past, present and future
The geomorphology of the present day and Holocene (3000 years ago) Humber estuary, United Kingdom, are described. More than 90% of the intertidal area and sediment accumulation capacity of the estuary has been lost to reclamation over this period. A similar situation prevails in many other urbanized estuaries. Nutrient budgets for the modern estuary are presented demonstrating little trapping of nutrients, due to the loss of intertidal areas. A speculative budget for the Humber during the Holocene is constructed, which suggests that the estuary was then an efficient sink for nitrogen and phosphorus. A budget is presented describing how nutrient cycling might operate in the Humber with contemporary nutrient loadings, but with the pre-reclamation geography. This suggests that in this form the estuary would significantly attenuate nutrient fluxes to the North Sea. The results are discussed in terms of options for managed realignment of estuaries in response to predicted sea-level rise.
0044-7447
130-135
Jickells, Timothy
a5b32f08-da58-43ed-b180-ebbe96b98701
Andrews, Julian
8717fd41-99ce-44fb-b682-05fec3691813
Samways, Gregory
2aa72540-a5e6-43e8-a471-dee993043d80
Sanders, Richard
02c163c1-8f5e-49ad-857c-d28f7da66c65
Malcolm, Stephen
26be0ea2-4a2f-49b2-941a-d2cf9f7524f6
Sivyer, David
e274463f-d239-4d51-ad23-89e9e1233e1d
Parker, Ruth
ce41b78b-a29a-4b17-a517-3b2e79f17bba
Nedwell, David
83bc4afa-c7db-43ee-8361-da2b78d752f3
Trimmer, Mark
c5d8598a-d7a3-411f-a380-80498066d88c
Ridgway, John
d954cfd9-cb6d-449b-9f5f-8b2f1915f722
Jickells, Timothy
a5b32f08-da58-43ed-b180-ebbe96b98701
Andrews, Julian
8717fd41-99ce-44fb-b682-05fec3691813
Samways, Gregory
2aa72540-a5e6-43e8-a471-dee993043d80
Sanders, Richard
02c163c1-8f5e-49ad-857c-d28f7da66c65
Malcolm, Stephen
26be0ea2-4a2f-49b2-941a-d2cf9f7524f6
Sivyer, David
e274463f-d239-4d51-ad23-89e9e1233e1d
Parker, Ruth
ce41b78b-a29a-4b17-a517-3b2e79f17bba
Nedwell, David
83bc4afa-c7db-43ee-8361-da2b78d752f3
Trimmer, Mark
c5d8598a-d7a3-411f-a380-80498066d88c
Ridgway, John
d954cfd9-cb6d-449b-9f5f-8b2f1915f722

Jickells, Timothy, Andrews, Julian, Samways, Gregory, Sanders, Richard, Malcolm, Stephen, Sivyer, David, Parker, Ruth, Nedwell, David, Trimmer, Mark and Ridgway, John (2000) Nutrient fluxes through the Humber estuary - past, present and future. Ambio, 19 (3), 130-135.

Record type: Article

Abstract

The geomorphology of the present day and Holocene (3000 years ago) Humber estuary, United Kingdom, are described. More than 90% of the intertidal area and sediment accumulation capacity of the estuary has been lost to reclamation over this period. A similar situation prevails in many other urbanized estuaries. Nutrient budgets for the modern estuary are presented demonstrating little trapping of nutrients, due to the loss of intertidal areas. A speculative budget for the Humber during the Holocene is constructed, which suggests that the estuary was then an efficient sink for nitrogen and phosphorus. A budget is presented describing how nutrient cycling might operate in the Humber with contemporary nutrient loadings, but with the pre-reclamation geography. This suggests that in this form the estuary would significantly attenuate nutrient fluxes to the North Sea. The results are discussed in terms of options for managed realignment of estuaries in response to predicted sea-level rise.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: 2000

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 64746
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/64746
ISSN: 0044-7447
PURE UUID: 287877d8-5206-40df-81ad-498139f4daf0

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Jan 2009
Last modified: 07 Jan 2022 22:37

Export record

Contributors

Author: Timothy Jickells
Author: Julian Andrews
Author: Gregory Samways
Author: Richard Sanders
Author: Stephen Malcolm
Author: David Sivyer
Author: Ruth Parker
Author: David Nedwell
Author: Mark Trimmer
Author: John Ridgway

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

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×