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Key factors influencing differences in stream water quality across space

Anna LinternDepartment of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville AustraliaJ. Angus WebbDepartment of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville AustraliaDongryeol RyuDepartment of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville AustraliaShuci LiuDepartment of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville AustraliaUlrike Bende‐MichlBureau of Meteorology Parkes AustraliaDavid WatersQueensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines Toowoomba AustraliaPaul LeahyWater Resources Division Applied Sciences Group, EPA Victoria AustraliaPaul J. WilsonAndrew W. WesternDepartment of Infrastructure Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville Australia
2017en
ABI

Annotatsiya

Globally, many rivers are experiencing declining water quality, for example, with altered levels of sediments, salts, and nutrients. Effective water quality management requires a sound understanding of how and why water quality differs across space, both within and between river catchments. Land cover, land use, land management, atmospheric deposition, geology and soil type, climate, topography, and catchment hydrology are the key features of a catchment that affect: (1) the amount of suspended sediment, nutrient, and salt concentrations in catchments (i.e., the source), (2) the mobilization ,and (3) the delivery of these constituents to receiving waters. There are, however, complexities in the relationship between landscape characteristics and stream water quality. The strength of this relationship can be influenced by the distance and spatial arrangement of constituent sources within the catchment, cross correlations between landscape characteristics, and seasonality. A knowledge gap that should be addressed in future studies is that of interactions and cross correlations between landscape characteristics. There is currently limited understanding of how the relationships between landscape characteristics and water quality responses can shift based on the other characteristics of the catchment. Understanding the many forces driving stream water quality and the complexities and interactions in these forces is necessary for the development of successful water quality management strategies. This knowledge could be used to develop predictive models, which would aid in forecasting of riverine water quality. WIREs Water 2018, 5:e1260. doi: 10.1002/wat2.1260 This article is categorized under: Science of Water > Hydrological Processes Science of Water > Water Quality

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