The Entire Catchment and Site Buffer Radii Landscape Variables, Urban Land Use as Predictors of Water Quality Variation

Author(s):  
Y. Azyana ◽  
N. A. Nik Norulaini

<i>Abstract.</i>—Anthropogenic activities including urbanization, agriculture, and dams degrade stream habitats and are a dominant reason for global biodiversity declines in fluvial fish assemblages. Declining diversity trends have been well documented in many regions of the world; however, fishes vary regionally in response to anthropogenic land use, resulting from complex relationships between landscape variables and mechanisms controlling stream fish assemblages. To test for differences in regional fish response to anthropogenic land use, we conducted our study across five freshwater ecoregions in the temperate mesic portion of the United States and evaluated data characterizing stream fish assemblages from 10,522 locations across all study freshwater ecoregions. Fishes were summarized by metrics describing assemblage structure, trophic groupings of species, levels of tolerance to anthropogenic stressors, and life history characteristics, with seven metrics used for analyses. Natural and anthropogenic landscape variables were assessed across freshwater ecoregions, and we tested for regionally specific influences of percent catchment urbanization, percent catchment agriculture, and catchment densities of dams and stream-road crossings on stream fishes. We used cascade multivariate regression trees to quantify variance explained in fish metrics by these landscape variables after controlling for influences of natural landscape variables, including catchment area, catchment lithology, and elevation of study sites. Results indicated differences in dominant influences by freshwater ecoregion, as well as differences in the levels of anthropogenic land use influencing fishes within and across freshwater ecoregions. For example, urban land use was the most influential anthropogenic land use in both Appalachian Piedmont and Chesapeake Bay freshwater ecoregions, with fish assemblage metrics showing responses at 10% and 1% catchment urban land use, respectively. In contrast, dam density in the network catchment was the most influential anthropogenic variable on fish assemblage metrics in both the Laurentian Great Lakes and Middle Missouri freshwater ecoregions. Also, large amounts of agriculture in the catchment was the most influential anthropogenic land use on fish assemblage metrics in the Upper Mississippi freshwater ecoregion. Knowledge of regional differences in the top contributing anthropogenic landscape variables and the levels at which fish assemblages respond to these variables lends insight into mechanisms controlling stream fish assemblages by freshwater ecoregions and can aid in development of region-specific conservation strategies to prevent biodiversity loss from current and future anthropogenic land use.


2007 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 175-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soon-Jin Hwang ◽  
Sang-Woo Lee ◽  
Ju-Youn Son ◽  
Geun-Ae Park ◽  
Seong-Joon Kim

Author(s):  
Onosakponome . ◽  
Ogaga Robert

Water quality levels of Otamiri River was studied to seek explanations for the variations of water quality indicators in the river and also tried to evaluate the influence of urban land use activities and season on the water quality and to examine the water quality of Otamiri River for agricultural and domestic uses. Water sampling and laboratory analyses were carried out using standard procedures to determine the concentrations of selected parameters in the sample. The data obtained ranged from 21.10 to 98.00µS/cm for Electrical Conductivity, 9.70 to 45.10mg/l for TDS, 5.60 to 20.80mg/l total hardness, 0.00 to 3.06mg/l NO3- , 0.15 to 6.50mg/l PO4, 0.00 to 12.63mg/l SO4 2- , and 14.48 to 32.96mg/l Cl- . Other results ranged from 12.03 to 19.26mg/l BOD5, TSS 40.50 to 1793.50mg/l, turbidity 7.86 to 96.40NTU and pH 6.48 to 6.90 at 29?C. The data clearly show that areas outside the influence of urban activities still maintain their pristine environmental conditions with water quality parameters falling within permissible limits. The water from these areas can sustain aquatic life and are safe for human consumption. However, the results further showed that the midstream area that receive wastes from urban land use activities was polluted with parameters such as NO3- , PO4- , Cl- , BOD5, TDS, and COD being higher than the permissible limit. This demonstrates the influence of urban land use on the water quality of Otamiri River.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 397 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. I. Balogun ◽  
I. S. Akoteyon ◽  
O. Adeaga

The study relates groundwater quality to land use types in Lagos State. Fourteen samples were collected from hand dug wells and boreholes, seven each from rural and urban land uses in the study area. Ten parameters (pH, electrical conductivity, total dissolved solids, total hardness, calcium, magnesium, chloride, nitrate and sulfate) were determined using standard methods. The resulting water quality indices revealed that 58.09% of the samples were rated very poor while 21.73%, 9.08% and 11.1% were rated poor, good and excellent, respectively in rural land use. The analysis of samples drawn from urban land use revealed that 76.55% of the water was unfit for drinking while 14.4%, 6.42% and 2.63% were found to be very poor, good and excellent, respectively. pH, total dissolved solids, chloride, total hardness and nitrate were beyond the permissible limits for urban land use while, pH, total hardness and nitrate were above permissible limits for rural land use. These parameters were found to be responsible for the poor water quality rating in the study areas. The paper recommends a comprehensive effective sewerage system for safe disposal of sewage, efficient waste water handling and control of urban runoff to prevent groundwater quality deterioration in the study areas.Keywords: Evaluation; Groundwater; Quality; Land use; Water quality index; Lagos-Nigeria.© 2012 JSR Publications. ISSN: 2070-0237 (Print); 2070-0245 (Online). All rights reserved.doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jsr.v4i2.7142 J. Sci. Res. 4 (2), 397-409 (2012)


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document