Response of macroinvertebrate community to water quality factors and aquatic ecosystem health assessment in a typical river in Beijing, China.

Environ Res

Beijing Key Laboratory of Urban Hydrological Cycle and Sponge City Technology, College of Water Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, 100875, China.

Published: September 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Healthy aquatic ecosystems support sustainable human development and are greatly affected by water quality, which impacts macroinvertebrate communities.
  • The study developed a framework to analyze the relationship between macroinvertebrate communities and water quality factors in urban rivers, using the North Canal River in Beijing as a case study.
  • Key findings identified fluoride, biochemical oxygen demand, ammonia-nitrogen, and total phosphorus as crucial water quality factors influencing macroinvertebrate communities, with results indicating generally unhealthy river conditions, especially downstream.

Article Abstract

Healthy aquatic ecosystems can offer basic ecological services for the sustainable development of humans and society. Water quality greatly influences the macroinvertebrate community in aquatic ecosystems and can alter the aquatic ecosystem's health status. However, the quantitative relationship between macroinvertebrate community and water quality factors in rivers remains unclear, particularly in urban rivers, which are strongly affected by human activities. Therefore, a new framework for the quantitative analysis between macroinvertebrate community and key water quality driving factors was developed in the study, meanwhile, the aquatic ecosystem health conditions were evaluated and validated by different methods. The framework was applied to a typical urban river, the North Canal River, which is regarded as the "mother river" of Beijing. Combined with the redundancy analysis (RDA) and the threshold indicator taxa analysis (TITAN), the water quality driving factors and their indicator species were identified and the corresponding response threshold was determined. Based on the benthic index of biotic integrity (B-IBI), the multi-metric rapid bioassessment method, and the biological monitoring working party (BMWP) score, the aquatic ecosystem health condition in the basin was comprehensively evaluated. The results show that fluoride, biochemical oxygen demand, ammonia-nitrogen and total phosphorus were the key water quality driving factors influencing the community structure of macroinvertebrates. Four indicator species of ammonia-nitrogen were identified by the TITAN method with a threshold range of 1.09-6.94 mg L, and three indicator species of total phosphorus were identified with a threshold range of 0.48-1.27 mg L. According to the results of the aquatic ecosystem health assessment, the river ecosystem was generally unhealthy and the upstream was better than downstream; the health condition in the mountainous areas of Changping district was the best, while that in Chaoyang district and the central city area was the worst. The framework could provide a strong basis for ecological restoration and pollution control of the urban rivers and become an important tool for the rehabilitation of aquatic ecosystems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2022.113474DOI Listing

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