Publication: Investigation of long-term river water quality variations using different urbanization indices and assessment of common scientific perspectives of urbanization on water quality
Type:
Article
Date
2022-07-10
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wily
Abstract
This study investigated the water quality variation spanning 30 years (1986–2017) in
16 catchments of Hong Kong against different urbanization indices, namely, built area
fraction; population; and product of population and built area fraction. Pearson correlations of three different periods of time (1988–1990, 1998–2000, and 2015–2017)
indicated that water quality trends were dependent on the urbanization index. Total
solids, nitrite-nitrogen, total phosphorus, electrical conductivity, dissolved oxygen, and
flow rate had significant deteriorative trends (Pearson r > 0.5 and p < 0.05) with population and product of built area and population. Results also interpreted that built
area fraction and product of built area and population were the worst and best indices
that represented urbanization and/or its impacts, respectively. Mann-Kendall test for
the entire 30 year period showed that water quality had improved with time with
respect to certain water quality parameters (e.g., dissolved oxygen, ammoniacal nitrogen and total suspended solids). The results portrayed that although the urbanization
of catchments had increased with time, the river water quality with respect to many
parameters showed signs of improvement and the legislative measures implemented
seemed to be effective in controlling pollution.
Description
Keywords
long-term water quality trends, Mann-Kendall test, Pearson correlation, urbanization indices, water quality
