Are Diatom-based Indices from Europe Suitable for River Health assessment in China? A Case Study from Taizi River, Northeastern China
Journal Title: International Journal of Environment and Climate Change - Year 2014, Vol 4, Issue 1
Abstract
Aims: Diatom-based indices are widely used for river health assessment. Many such indices were originally developed in European countries based on a specific taxa list of benthic diatoms. Thus, the transferability of these indices to other rivers and geographic locations has been questioned. Design, Place and Duration of Study: In this study, we sampled benthic diatoms in the Taizi River, a temperate river in northeastern China during May 2009 to evaluate the applicability of eight commonly used diatom-based indices for assessing the principal water quality gradient and relationship with different water chemical parameters. Methodology: Sensitivities of the eight indices were evaluated by applying the principle component analysis (PCA), the box-plot map and multiple comparisons of the Kruskal–Wallis nonparametric test (K-W test). Results: The results showed that all eight of the tested indices showed significant correlations with the principal contamination gradient of both nutrient enrichment and organic pollution. The contamination gradient was extracted through principal component analysis and the first three axes explained 40.19%, 18.72%, and 9.77% of the total variation, respectively. Conclusion: Our results confirmed that the diatom-based indices did not properly reflect the current Chinese surface water quality classes. However, these indices showed consistent trends with chemical parameters that reflected general water quality condition, such as electric conductivity (EC); organic pollution, as reflected by dissolved oxygen (DO) and chemical oxygen demand (COD) and nutrient enrichment, as reflected by total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP). The results indicated that both BDI and SHE were the most suitable diatom-based indices among the eight tested indices, although SPI, DES and ROTT were also suitable for river health assessment in the Taizi River.
Authors and Affiliations
Xiaodong Qu, Ying Zhou, Rui Zhao, Catherine Bentsen, Xuwang Yin, Yuan Zhang
Influence of Natural and Anthropogenic Processes in the Coastline Evolution at the Doce River Mouth (EspĂrito Santo, Brazil)
Aims and Place: The Doce River is one of the largest rivers of southeastern Brazil, and has been target of strong environmental impact in recent decades due to mining and farming activities. Influenced by lithological fa...
How Does Your Garden Flow? The Impact of Domestic Front Gardens on Urban Flooding
Aims: To quantify rainwater runoff from domestic front gardens as a consequence of increased impervious surface area and climate change impacts, thus allowing the runoff contribution from both newly and previously covere...
Analyzing the Role of Poor and Developing Nations in Global Climate Agreements
Increasingly, countries are gathering to address concerns surrounding climate change. The 2015 United Nations Conference of Parties, COP21, saw the emergence of a landmark agreement for collective global action. The tagl...
Water Sector Service Innovation: What, Where and Who?
Aims: Changes in water law and policy, in the UK and further afield, are promoting social and service innovation, as well as technical innovation in the water sector. In particular, the separation of wholesale and retail...
Carrying Capacity and Sustainability Appraisals on Regional Water Supply Systems under Climate Change
This study aims to appraise the carrying capacity and sustainability of four water supply systems which are in the same watershed under climate change. An integrated assessment tool, TaiWAP, which integrates the common p...