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Journal ArticleDOI

Relating land use patterns to stream nutrient levels in red soil agricultural catchments in subtropical central China.

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TLDR
This study explored the relationships between land use patterns and stream nutrient levels in one forest and 12 agricultural catchments in subtropical central China and suggested that land use pattern indices at the class level played an intrinsic role in influencing stream nutrient quality.
Abstract
Land use has obvious influence on surface water quality; thus, it is important to understand the effects of land use patterns on surface water quality. This study explored the relationships between land use patterns and stream nutrient levels, including ammonium-N (NH4 +-N), nitrate-N (NO3 −-N), total N (TN), dissolved P (DP), and total P (TP) concentrations, in one forest and 12 agricultural catchments in subtropical central China. The results indicated that the TN concentrations ranged between 0.90 and 6.50 mg L−1 and the TP concentrations ranged between 0.08 and 0.53 mg L−1, showing that moderate nutrient pollution occurred in the catchments. The proportional areal coverages of forests, paddy fields, tea fields, residential areas, and water had distinct effects on stream nutrient levels. Except for the forest, all studied land use types had a potential to increase stream nutrient levels in the catchments. The land use pattern indices at the landscape level were significantly correlated to N nutrients but rarely correlated to P nutrients in stream water, whereas the influence of the land use pattern indices at the class level on stream water quality differentiated among the land use types and nutrient species. Multiple regression analysis suggested that land use pattern indices at the class level, including patch density (PD), largest patch index (LPI), mean shape index (SHMN), and mean Euclidian nearest neighbor distance (ENNMN), played an intrinsic role in influencing stream nutrient quality, and these four indices explained 35.08 % of the variability of stream nutrient levels in the catchments (p<0.001). Therefore, this research provides useful ideas and insights for land use planners and managers interested in controlling stream nutrient pollution in subtropical central China.

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Journal ArticleDOI

New insight into the correlations between land use and water quality in a coastal watershed of China: Does point source pollution weaken it?

TL;DR: A self-organizing map (SOM)-based approach is developed to explore the relationship between land use and water quality in the Minjiang River Watershed, Southeast China and demonstrates how PS pollution weakens the land use-water quality correlation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking river nutrient concentrations to land use and rainfall in a paddy agriculture-urban area gradient watershed in southeast China

TL;DR: A statistical model developed showed that impervious surfaces, which is interpreted as a proxy for urban activities including sewage disposal, were the most important drivers of nutrient concentrations, whereas water surfaces accounted for a substantial proportion of the nutrient sinks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nitrogen and phosphorus runoff losses were influenced by chemical fertilization but not by pesticide application in a double rice-cropping system in the subtropical hilly region of China.

TL;DR: The results showed that the high-risk periods for N loss were in the first 5 days after the base fertilizer (BF) application and the first 10 days after the topdressing fertilizer application in both early and late rice seasons, while the high to high- risk periods for P loss were after the BF application.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of land-use patterns on in-stream nitrogen in a highly-polluted river basin in Northeast China.

TL;DR: Investigation of land-use patterns on nitrogen pollution in the Haicheng River basin in Northeast China during 2010 suggested that regulating built-up land uses and reducing discharges of domestic sewage and industrial wastewater would be effective methods for river nitrogen control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Landscape composition or configuration: which contributes more to catchment hydrological flows and variations?

TL;DR: In this article, the relationship among landscape composition, configuration, and hydrological flows and variations was analyzed by Pearson correlation, and their relative contributions were determined by the variance partitioning analysis.
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