Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Eagle Creek Reservoir (ECR), located in the Midwestern U.S., is a freshwater limnic system plagued by seasonal Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) which generate water-fouling Geosmin (GSM) and 2-Methylisoborneol (MIB) Taste and Odor (T&O) co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Howard, Chase Steven
Other Authors: Druschel, Gregory K.
Language:en_US
Published: 2020
Subjects:
GSM
MIB
ECR
T&O
VOC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24610
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spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-246102020-12-16T05:08:41Z Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir Howard, Chase Steven Druschel, Gregory K. Jacinthe, Pierre-André Picard, Christine J. Harmful Algal Bloom Geosmin 2-Methylisoborneol GSM MIB ECR Eagle Creek Reservoir T&O Taste and Odor Cyanobacteria Actinobacteria Freshwater Limnic Geochemistry Environment VOC Volatile Organic Compound Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Eagle Creek Reservoir (ECR), located in the Midwestern U.S., is a freshwater limnic system plagued by seasonal Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) which generate water-fouling Geosmin (GSM) and 2-Methylisoborneol (MIB) Taste and Odor (T&O) compounds. Past investigations of T&O event dynamics have identified Actinomycetes as responsible for MIB production and several genera of cyanobacteria for GSM production. During 2018, a temporally and spatially expansive sampling regimen of the reservoir was carried out and a battery of biological, chemical, physical, and hyperspectral experiments performed. The resulting data was analyzed using time series, cross-correlation, lag time, and multivariate analyses as well as machine learning algorithms to pick apart and interrogate any relationships between HABs, T&O events, and environmental parameters. The results show that local weather and watershed conditions exert significant control over the state of the reservoir and the behavior of the algal community. GSM and MIB peaked during early May under well-mixed, cold, and nutrient-rich water column conditions, then declined under summer thermal stratification before making a small resurgence during late season mixing. Bloom die-off and decay was effectively ruled out as a mechanism controlling T&O concentrations, and no links were found between T&O concentrations and algal biomass. Strong evidence was found that GSM/MIB concentrations were a response by bloom microbes to changing nutrient conditions within the reservoir, and it was determined that nutrient fluxes from the watershed 30-40 days prior to peak T&O concentrations are likely instrumental in the development of the slow- ix growing microbes characteristic of the reservoir. Attempts were made to assess spatial and temporal variability but no significant spatial differences were identified; differences between sampling sites were far smaller than differences between different sampling dates. The findings here add to the growing body of literature showing T&O and HAB dynamics are more closely linked to the relative abundance and speciation of nutrients than other parameters. Additionally, these findings carry important implications for the management of ECR and other similar freshwater reservoirs while highlighting the importance of reducing watershed eutrophication. 2020-12-14T13:11:22Z 2020-12-14T13:11:22Z 2020-11 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24610 en_US Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Harmful Algal Bloom
Geosmin
2-Methylisoborneol
GSM
MIB
ECR
Eagle Creek Reservoir
T&O
Taste and Odor
Cyanobacteria
Actinobacteria
Freshwater
Limnic
Geochemistry
Environment
VOC
Volatile Organic Compound
spellingShingle Harmful Algal Bloom
Geosmin
2-Methylisoborneol
GSM
MIB
ECR
Eagle Creek Reservoir
T&O
Taste and Odor
Cyanobacteria
Actinobacteria
Freshwater
Limnic
Geochemistry
Environment
VOC
Volatile Organic Compound
Howard, Chase Steven
Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Eagle Creek Reservoir (ECR), located in the Midwestern U.S., is a freshwater limnic system plagued by seasonal Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) which generate water-fouling Geosmin (GSM) and 2-Methylisoborneol (MIB) Taste and Odor (T&O) compounds. Past investigations of T&O event dynamics have identified Actinomycetes as responsible for MIB production and several genera of cyanobacteria for GSM production. During 2018, a temporally and spatially expansive sampling regimen of the reservoir was carried out and a battery of biological, chemical, physical, and hyperspectral experiments performed. The resulting data was analyzed using time series, cross-correlation, lag time, and multivariate analyses as well as machine learning algorithms to pick apart and interrogate any relationships between HABs, T&O events, and environmental parameters. The results show that local weather and watershed conditions exert significant control over the state of the reservoir and the behavior of the algal community. GSM and MIB peaked during early May under well-mixed, cold, and nutrient-rich water column conditions, then declined under summer thermal stratification before making a small resurgence during late season mixing. Bloom die-off and decay was effectively ruled out as a mechanism controlling T&O concentrations, and no links were found between T&O concentrations and algal biomass. Strong evidence was found that GSM/MIB concentrations were a response by bloom microbes to changing nutrient conditions within the reservoir, and it was determined that nutrient fluxes from the watershed 30-40 days prior to peak T&O concentrations are likely instrumental in the development of the slow- ix growing microbes characteristic of the reservoir. Attempts were made to assess spatial and temporal variability but no significant spatial differences were identified; differences between sampling sites were far smaller than differences between different sampling dates. The findings here add to the growing body of literature showing T&O and HAB dynamics are more closely linked to the relative abundance and speciation of nutrients than other parameters. Additionally, these findings carry important implications for the management of ECR and other similar freshwater reservoirs while highlighting the importance of reducing watershed eutrophication.
author2 Druschel, Gregory K.
author_facet Druschel, Gregory K.
Howard, Chase Steven
author Howard, Chase Steven
author_sort Howard, Chase Steven
title Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
title_short Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
title_full Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
title_fullStr Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
title_full_unstemmed Taste And Odor Event Dynamics Of A Midwestern Freshwater Reservoir
title_sort taste and odor event dynamics of a midwestern freshwater reservoir
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/24610
work_keys_str_mv AT howardchasesteven tasteandodoreventdynamicsofamidwesternfreshwaterreservoir
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