Abstract

Newly developed mobile phone applications in combination with citizen science are used in different fields of research, such as public health monitoring, environmental monitoring, precipitation monitoring, noise pollution measurement and mapping, earth observation. In this paper, we present a low-cost water quality mobile phone measurement technique combined with sensor and test strips, and reported the weekly-collected data of three years of the Ayeyarwady River system by volunteers at seven locations and compared these results with the measurements collected by the lab technicians. We assessed the quality of the collected data and their reliability based on several indicators, such as data accuracy, consistency, and completeness. In this study, six local governmental staffs and one middle school teacher collected baseline water quality data with high temporal and spatial resolution. The quality of the data collected by volunteers was comparable to the data of the experienced lab technicians for sensor-based measurement of electrical conductivity and transparency. However, the lower accuracy (higher uncertainty range) of the indicator strips made them less useful in the Ayeyarwady with its relatively small water quality variations. We showed that participatory water quality monitoring in Myanmar can be a serious alternative for a more classical water sampling and lab analysis-based monitoring network, particularly as it results in much higher spatial and temporal resolution of water quality information against the very modest investment and running costs. This approach can help solving the invisible water crisis of unknown water quality (changes) in river and lake systems all over the world.

Highlights

  • Citizen science is basically the participation of local stakeholders in research design, data collection, data interpretation, and reporting, or any other related task [1]

  • We present the low-cost water quality mobile phone measurement technique and report the weekly-collected data of three years

  • The weekly water quality results, as measured in situ by participatory monitoring, the annual in situ measurements by DWIR technicians, and the results of the monthly water quality measurements analyzed in the lab, are presented in Supplement Material II

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Summary

Introduction

Citizen science is basically the participation of local stakeholders in research design, data collection, data interpretation, and reporting, or any other related task [1]. It is crucial to raise awareness of the importance of good water quality among the general public and local authorities. These can be sustained by citizen science with a participatory approach. Developed mobile phone applications in combination with citizen science are used in different fields of research, such as public health monitoring [2], water resources management [3], environmental monitoring [4,5,6], noise pollution measurement and mapping [7], earth observation [8], precipitation monitoring [9]. Mobile phones are widely used in the water domain [3,10,11]

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