Abstract. Elevated phosphate (PO4) concentrations can harm the ecological status in water by eutrophication. In the majority of surface waters in lowland regions such as Flanders (Belgium), the local PO4 levels exceed the limits defined by environmental policy and fail to decrease, despite decreasing total phosphorus (P) emissions. In order to underpin the definition of currents limits, this study was set up to identify the pre-industrial background PO4 concentration in surface water of the Scheldt river, a tidal river in Flanders. We used the sedimentary records preserved in tidal marsh sediment cores as an archive for reconstructing historical changes in surface water PO4. For sediment samples at different depths below the sediment surface, we dated the time of sediment deposition and analysed the extractable sediment-P. The resulting time series of sediment-P was linked to time series of measured surface water PO4 concentrations (data 1967–present). By combining the sediment-P and water-PO4 data, the sorption characteristics of the sediment could be described. Those sorption characteristics allowed us to estimate a pre-industrial background surface water PO4 levels, based on deeper sediment-P that stabilised at concentrations smaller than the modern. In three out of the four cores, the sediment-P peaked around 1980, coinciding with the peak in surface water PO4. The estimated pre-industrial (~1800) background PO4-concentration in the Scheldt river water was 62 [57; 66 (95 %CI)] µg PO4-P/L. That concentration exceeds the previously estimated natural background values for lakes in Flanders (15–35 µg TP/L) and is about half of the prevailing limit in the Scheldt river (120 µg PO4-P/L). In the 1930s, river water concentrations were estimated at 140 [128; 148] µg PO4-P/L, already exceeding the current limit. The method developed here proved useful for reconstructing historical, background PO4 concentrations of a lowland tidal river. A similar approach can apply to other lowland tidal rivers to provide a scientific basis for local, catchment specific PO4 backgrounds.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.