Abstract

Surface water samples of baseflow were collected from 20 headwater sub-watersheds which were classified into three types of watersheds (natural, urban and agricultural) in the flood, dry and transition seasons during three consecutive years (2010–2012) within a coastal watershed of Southeast China. Integrating spatial statistics with multivariate statistical techniques, river water quality variations and their interactions with natural and anthropogenic controls were examined to identify the causal factors and underlying mechanisms governing spatiotemporal patterns of water quality. Anthropogenic input related to industrial effluents and domestic wastewater, agricultural activities associated with the precipitation-induced surface runoff, and natural weathering process were identified as the potential important factors to drive the seasonal variations in stream water quality for the transition, flood and dry seasons, respectively. All water quality indicators except SRP had the highest mean concentrations in the dry and transition seasons. Anthropogenic activities and watershed characteristics led to the spatial variations in stream water quality in three types of watersheds. Concentrations of NH4 +-N, SRP, K+, CODMn, and Cl− were generally highest in urban watersheds. NO3 –N Concentration was generally highest in agricultural watersheds. Mg2+ concentration in natural watersheds was significantly higher than that in agricultural watersheds. Spatial autocorrelations analysis showed similar levels of water pollution between the neighboring sub-watersheds exhibited in the dry and transition seasons while non-point source pollution contributed to the significant variations in water quality between neighboring sub-watersheds. Spatial regression analysis showed anthropogenic controls played critical roles in variations of water quality in the JRW. Management implications were further discussed for water resource management. This research demonstrates that the coupled effects of natural and anthropogenic controls involved in watershed processes, contribute to the seasonal and spatial variation of headwater stream water quality in a coastal watershed with high spatial variability and intensive anthropogenic activities.

Highlights

  • River water quality has become one of important concern worldwide

  • The primary objective of the present study is to examine the coupled effects of anthropogenic and natural controls on the seasonal and spatial variations in water quality in 20 headwater watersheds of the Jiulong River watershed (JRW)

  • All water quality parameters except soluble reactive phosphate (SRP) had their highest values of mean concentration in the dry and transition seasons, whereas the concentrations were the lowest in the flood season

Read more

Summary

Introduction

River water quality has become one of important concern worldwide. Rivers constitute the main water resource for drinking, irrigation, and industrial purposes in inlands [1,2]. As receiving water bodies, rivers assimilate or carry industrial and domestic wastewater, and runoff from agricultural fields, roadways and streets, thereafter discharging them into downstream estuarine and coastal water [3,4]. It is important to have reliable information on river water quality for water resource management from the local to global scale. This necessity is even more pronounced in coastal watersheds due to escalating environmental pressure and their special role in regional ecosystem services

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call