A major problem associated with the discharge of pulp or paper-mill effluent into shallow estuarine ecosystems, such as the upper L'Etang in Canada or the Don in Scotland, is the development of anoxic conditions in water column and sediment. The effluent modifies the balance, within the ecosystem, between the supply of, and demand for, oxygen. The lignosulphonate component of pulp-mill effluent blocks the transmission of light energy to photosynthetic green plants. The oxygen demand is increased by the microbial degration of the additional organic matter in water and sediment. The addition of cellulosic pulp fibre to the sediment also results in an increase in the concentration of their metabolic by-product, sulphide. The oxidation of sulphide exerts an additional oxygen demand on the system, which is an important factor in the development and maintenance of anoxic conditions. It is suggested that temperature is an important factor in controlling the release of sulphide from the sediment into the overlying water and in modifying the toxicity of sulphide towards the bacterial populations and, therefore, the capacity of the ecosystem to cope with the effluent.
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