Impacts of land uses on spatio-temporal variations of seasonal water quality in a regulated river basin, Huai River, China

Lingqing Wang, Xiaoxiao Han, Yongyong Zhang, Qian Zhang, Xiaoming Wan, Tao Liang, Hocheol Song, Nanthi Bolan, Sabry M Shaheen, John R White, Jörg Rinklebe

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

47 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Land use impacts from agriculture, industrialization, and human population should be considered in surface water quality management. In this study, we utilized an integrated statistical analysis approach mainly including a seasonal Mann-Kendall test, clustering analysis, self-organizing map, Boruta algorithm, and positive matrix factorization to the assessment of the interactions between land use types and water quality in a typical catchment in the Huai River Basin, China, over seven years (2012-2019). Spatially, water quality was clustered into three groups: upstream, midstream, and downstream/mainstream areas. The water quality of upstream sites was better than of mid-, down-, and mainstream. Temporally, water quality did not change significantly during the study period. However, the temporal variation in water quality of up-, down-, and mainstream areas was more stable than in the midstream. The interactions between land use types and water quality parameters at the sub-basin scale varied with seasons. Increasing forest/grassland areas could substantially improve the water quality during the wet season, while nutrients such as phosphorus from cropland and developed land was a driver for water quality deterioration in the dry season. Water area was not a significant factor influencing the variations of ammonia nitrogen (NH 3-N) and total phosphorus (TP) in the wet or dry season, due to the intensive dams and sluices in study area. The parameters TP, and total nitrogen (TN) were principally linked with agricultural sources in the wet and dry seasons. The parameters NH 3-N in the dry season, and chemical oxygen demand (COD Cr) in the wet season were mainly associated with point source discharges. Agricultural source, and urban point source discharges were the main causes of water quality deterioration in the study area. Collectively, these results highlighted the impacts of land use types on variations of water quality parameters in the regulated basin.

Original languageEnglish
Article number159584
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume857
Issue numberPart 2
Early online date18 Oct 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Jan 2023

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