Inicio  /  Hydrology  /  Vol: 4 Par: 2 (2017)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Advancing Understanding of the Surface Water Quality Regime of Contemporary Mixed-Land-Use Watersheds: An Application of the Experimental Watershed Method

Elliott Kellner and Jason A. Hubbart    

Resumen

A representative watershed was instrumented with five gauging sites (n = 5), partitioning the catchment into five nested-scale sub-watersheds. Four physiochemical variables were monitored: water temperature, pH, total dissolved solids (TDS), and dissolved oxygen (DO). Data were collected four days per week from October 2010?May 2014 at each gauging site. Statistical analyses indicated significant differences (p < 0.05) between nearly every monitoring site pairing for each physiochemical variable. The water temperature regime displayed a threshold/step-change condition, with an upshifted and more variable regime attributable to the impacts of urban land uses. TDS, pH, and DO displayed similar spatiotemporal trends, with increasing median concentrations from site #1 (agriculture) to #3 (mixed-use urban) and decreasing median concentrations from site #3 to #5 (suburban). Decreasing concentrations and increasing streamflow volume with stream distance, suggest the contribution of dilution processes to the physiochemical regime of the creek below urban site #3. DO concentrations exceeded water quality standards on an average of 31% of observation days. Results showed seasonal trends for each physiochemical parameter, with higher TDS, pH, and DO during the cold season (November?April) relative to the warm season (May?October). Multivariate modeling results emphasize the importance of the pH/DO relationship in these systems, and demonstrate the potential utility of a simple two factor model (water temperature and pH) in accurately predicting DO. Collectively, results highlight the interacting influences of natural (autotrophic photosynthesis, organic detritus loading) and anthropogenic (road salt application) factors on the physiochemical regime of mixed-land-use watersheds.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Xiang Li, Ruian Wu, Bing Han, Deguang Song, Zhongkang Wu, Wenbo Zhao and Qijun Zou    
Under rapid global climate change, the risk of ancient landslide reactivation induced by rainfall infiltration is increasing significantly. The contribution of cracks to the reactivation of ancient landslides, as an evolutionary product, is a topic that ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Jinsheng Fan, Qiushi Luo, Yuchuan Bai, Xiaofang Liu and Renzhi Li    
The roughness of a river?s boundary significantly influences the sediment transport process and the ultimate configuration of the river?s stable cross-section. This interplay between boundary roughness and river morphology is crucial to a river?s overall... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Federico Di Gaetano, Stefano Cascone and Rosa Caponetto    
In response to the pressing demand for sustainable building practices within the Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) sector, this study investigates the integration of building information modeling (BIM) processes with the Leadership in Ene... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Hossein Hassani, Pedram Amiri Andi, Alireza Ghodsi, Kimia Norouzi, Nadejda Komendantova and Stephan Unger    
Digitization is the emerging process in the current transformation of industry. Understanding the role and socio-economic consequences of digitalization is crucial for the way technology is being deployed in each sector. One of the affected sectors is de... ver más
Revista: IoT

 
Meeli Roose, Tua Nylén, Harri Tolvanen and Outi Vesakoski    
The role of open spatial data is growing in human-history research. Spatiality can be utilized to bring together and seamlessly examine data describing multiple aspects of human beings and their environment. Web-based spatial data platforms can create eq... ver más