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BEACHNET==> Eutrophication of U.S. Freshwaters: Analysis of Potential Economic Damages



Environmental Science & Technology
 
Abstract is included below and available at
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es801217q
Full article is available at http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/es801217q
 
Interesting quotes:
"Clear water is aesthetically pleasing and lakefront property has significantly greater value with increased clarity; a decrease in property value of 15.6% occurs with every 1-m loss in Secchi depth."
 
"We provide broad annual estimates of economic losses in recreational water usage ($1 billion), waterfront property ($0.3-$2.8 billion), recovery of threatened and endangered species ($44 million), and drinking water ($813 million), resulting from human-induced eutrophication. These potential losses total over $2.2 billion
annually and our estimates are probably conservative.

Eutrophication of U.S. Freshwaters: Analysis of Potential Economic Damages

Walter K. Dodds*, Wes W. Bouska, Jeffrey L. Eitzmann, Tyler J. Pilger, Kristen L. Pitts, Alyssa J. Riley, Joshua T. Schloesser, Darren J. Thornbrugh
Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506
Environ. Sci. Technol., Article ASAP
DOI: 10.1021/es801217q
Publication Date (Web): November 12, 2008
Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society
* Corresponding author phone: 785/532-6998; fax 785/532-6653; e-mail: wkdodds@ksu.edu.

Abstract

Human-induced eutrophication degrades freshwater systems worldwide by reducing water quality and altering ecosystem structure and function. We compared current total nitrogen (TN) and phosphorus (TP) concentrations for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency nutrient ecoregions with estimated reference conditions. In all nutrient ecoregions, current median TN and TP values for rivers and lakes exceeded reference median values. In 12 of 14 ecoregions, over 90% of rivers currently exceed reference median values. We calculated potential annual value losses in recreational water usage, waterfront real estate, spending on recovery of threatened and endangered species, and drinking water. The combined costs were approximately $2.2 billion annually as a result of eutrophication in U.S. freshwaters. The greatest economic losses were attributed to lakefront property values ($0.3−2.8 billion per year, although this number was poorly constrained) and recreational use ($0.37−1.16 billion per year). Our evaluation likely underestimates economic losses incurred from freshwater eutrophication. We document potential costs to identify where restoring natural nutrient regimes can have the greatest economic benefits. Our research exposes gaps in current records (e.g., accounting for frequency of algal blooms and fish kills) and suggests further research is necessary to refine cost estimates.