Water quality in two Australian dryland rivers: spatial and temporal variability and the role of flow
Author(s) -
Fran Sheldon,
C. S. Fellows
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
marine and freshwater research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1448-6059
pISSN - 1323-1650
DOI - 10.1071/mf09289
Subject(s) - dominance (genetics) , hydrology (agriculture) , water quality , temporal scales , environmental science , spatial variability , spatial ecology , drainage basin , ecology , geology , geography , biology , biochemistry , statistics , geotechnical engineering , mathematics , cartography , gene
Water quality, along with hydrology, plays an important role in the spatial and temporal dynamics of a range of ecological patterns and processes in large rivers and is also often a key component of river health assessments. Geology and land use are significant drivers of water quality during flow periods while during periods of no-flow, local-scale factors such as evaporation, groundwater influence and the concentration and precipitation of compounds are important. This study explored the water quality changes in two Australian dryland rivers, the Cooper Creek (Lake Eyre Basin) and the Warrego River (Murray-Darling Basin), across different hydrological phases over everal years. Water quality varied both spatially and temporally; the greatest spatial variability occurred during the no-flow phase, with temporal changes driven by flow. Concentrations of major anions and cations also varied spatially and temporally, with an overall cation dominance of calcium and magnesium and an anion dominance of bicarbonate. This bicarbonate dominance contrasts with previous data from inland lentic systems where sodium chloride was found to dominate. Such extreme spatial and temporal variability hampers successful derivation of water quality guidelines for these variable rivers and suggests such guidelines would need to be developed with respect to 'flow phase'.Full Tex
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