Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1016/j.ejrh.2026.103196
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Identifying flush and transport patterns driving particle export and elemental composition of stormwater from a German urban catchment
Author Rojas-Gómez, K.L. ORCID logo ; Benisch, J.; Helm, B.; Borchardt, D.; Krebs, P.
Source Titel Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
Year 2026
Department ASAM
Volume 64
Page From art. 103196
Language englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Supplements Supplement 1
Keywords Diffuse pollution; Fine sediments; High-temporal monitoring; Metals; Storm water quality; Trace elements; Urban watershed
Abstract Study region
Dresden, Germany
Study focus
Stormwater runoff transports particles and contaminants, which are highly mobile in the urban water system. Their export shows significant temporal variability described by pollutant flush types. Understanding this variability is essential for improving monitoring and proposing stormwater pollution control strategies at the urban catchment scale. Hence, we characterised the sediment export and element patterns from a stormwater outlet in Dresden (Germany) using both grab samples and high-resolution monitoring data during rainfall events.
New hydrological insights from the region
Our results showed that the stormwater discharge consisted mainly of fine (< 63 µm) and inorganic sediments, representing ∼80 % of suspended sediments. Pairwise associations and a hierarchical cluster analysis revealed strong Kendall correlations among fine and coarse suspended sediments, their organic content, and elements (i.e., Al, Ba, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Zn), indicating similar transport mechanisms. These variables clustered with turbidity, emphasizing its potential as an easily measurable proxy for evaluating the dynamics of particle-bound contaminants through continuous monitoring. Hydrological descriptors may explain the variability of flush types. In the analysed catchment, second flush events could be linked to preceding higher-intensity rainfall, highlighting the influence of antecedent conditions on transport dynamics. The occurrence of two pollutant flush types through the year and the existence of both anti-clockwise and clockwise hysteresis patterns provide insights into delayed transport mechanisms, highlighting the need for flexible infrastructure in stormwater management.
Rojas-Gómez, K.L., Benisch, J., Helm, B., Borchardt, D., Krebs, P. (2026):
Identifying flush and transport patterns driving particle export and elemental composition of stormwater from a German urban catchment
J. Hydrol. Reg. Stud. 64 , art. 103196 10.1016/j.ejrh.2026.103196