Study finds road salt contamination in groundwater
Road salts commonly used in the winter to melt ice and keep roads clear are not being effectively absorbed by mitigation measures, allowing the salt to reach groundwater and wells, says a Virginia Tech expert.
“Added salt in the water system can cause wells to stop providing potable water as well as change the taste and color,” said Joel Snodgrass, head of the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation at Virginia Tech.
Background
Snodgrass and his research team recently published a study in Environmental Science and Technology. They discovered that routing runoff contaminated with road salts to stormwater ponds resulted in plumes of highly contaminated groundwater moving from ponds to streams.
Elevated salt levels in groundwater and surface water can have negative impacts on both people and wildlife.
Quoting Snodgrass
On study findings: “We know that surface water salt levels have been rising steadily for at least the past 30 years in Baltimore’s reservoirs and we know little about the effectiveness in reducing inputs of salt to surface waters.”
“Current stormwater management practices don’t completely stop chemicals from reaching streams and we have seen chemical contamination year round.”
“People may end up drinking water containing sodium levels that exceed those recommended for people on low sodium diets.”
“Municipal water supplies may also become contaminated and require treatment to lower sodium and chloride levels before distribution.”
“Some counties are already reimbursing people for the costs associated with replacing contaminated water wells.”
On the wildlife impact: “You’re basically putting these animals in a desert, because they can’t regulate the salt in their bodies and get enough water to balance it out.”
“If salt levels continue to increase in freshwater areas, many fish and amphibians will stop breeding and eventually die because their bodies cannot adjust to the change.”
About Snodgrass
Joel Snodgrass is head of the Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation at Virginia Tech. He is an aquatic ecologist interested in the effects of human induced landscape change on the physical and biotic environment of aquatic systems, and the biology and evolution of aquatic organisms such as fish and amphibians that inhabit streams and freshwater wetlands. Read his full bio here.
Expertise featured in WDBJ and WTOP.
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