Abstract

This study presents a comprehensive investigation of water quality parameters in the fourth sector of Lake Palic in Serbia, which has a regional strategic importance. Namely, it is designated as a tourist destination. What is perhaps even more important is that its surplus water ends up in Lake Ludas, a significant habitat for migrating and aquatic bird species, and it is a RAMSAR site. The conducted analysis points to the major conclusion that the reasons for very high Chlorophyll-a values can be found in considerable anthropogenic pressures exerted on the studied area. Due to these pressures, the lake is not in ecological equilibrium. To support this conclusion, an in-depth analysis was conducted using water quality measurements for 9years, from 2011 to 2019. The data was subject to principal component analysis (PCA) and machine learning classification algorithms that identified a seasonal character regarding the lake's water quality. Water quality indexes (WQI) were determined using two approaches to provide a more general insight into the lake's overall quality. Keeping in mind the large number of data gathered monthly within the Palic-Ludas Lake system, fitted models for estimating certain water quality parameters were also developed. This was accomplished via multivariate regression, resulting in a number of equations that can, using a few basic input parameters, predict values of ammonium nitrogen, Chlorophyll-a, and 5-day biological oxygen demand. The fitted models were obtained for relatively homogeneous periods within a year identified by cluster analysis.

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