Correlation between Riparian Buffers and Water Quality in North Carolina Watersheds

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2013-04-16

Authors

Fang, Yao
Hashmi, Fatima

Advisors

Doyle, Martin

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Repository Usage Stats

296
views
599
downloads

Abstract

Stream water quality is often impacted by changes in land use such as deforestation. Since streams are usually the major drinking water sources for millions of people, Water Treatment Plants are the most common water resource management option for treating degraded stream water for drinking water purposes. However because treatment plants are capital intensive, land use conservation as a water resource management option is now widely being adopted. The ability of forests to acts as natural water filters could drive down water treatment costs and offer a cost-effective way to provide clean drinking water. The purpose of this study is therefore to test the hypothesis that an increase of forest cover in watersheds and riparian buffers leads to water quality improvement. Land use metrics were generated from geospatial analysis using ArcGIS. Intake points were located for 31 WTPs across North Carolina, and their corresponding watershed boundaries were delineated. The 2006 National Land Cover and Land Use dataset was used to determine percent of forest cover, impervious cover and agricultural cover at three different spatial scales; watershed, 300ft riparian buffer and 100ft riparian buffer. In addition, water quality data of two water quality parameters, Turbidity and Total Organic Content (TOC) were used. The water quality data were reported as monthly averages between 2009 and 2012 for Turbidity and between 2009 and 2012 for TOC. Simple and multiple regressions were then conducted between the land use categories and water quality data. The results of the regression analyses overall indicated that percent of forest cover in all three spatial scales strongly affected mean TOC while agricultural land cover within the 100ft riparian buffer strongly affected mean Turbidity. Impervious cover did not seem to have strong effects on water quality. Therefore it is recommended that the efforts should be directed at minimizing agricultural land cover within riparian buffers. Protection of forest cover to reduce TOC concentration in streams should also be prioritized. Across the three different spatial scales, 100ft riparian buffers should continue to be protected as well. These measures will help towards maintaining the quality of drinking water sources.

Description

Provenance

Citation

Citation

Fang, Yao, and Fatima Hashmi (2013). Correlation between Riparian Buffers and Water Quality in North Carolina Watersheds. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6595.


Dukes student scholarship is made available to the public using a Creative Commons Attribution / Non-commercial / No derivative (CC-BY-NC-ND) license.