Relationship between land use and water quality in a tropical urban catchment of the Congo Basin: A case study of N'Djili River catchment

Author:

Sani Zouera1ORCID,Katshiatshia Haddy Mbuyi2,M. Tshimanga Raphael3,Basamba Twaha Ali4,Odume Oghenekaro Nelson5

Affiliation:

1. a Regional School of water, University of Kinshasa (UNIKIN), Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa

2. b Renewable Energy Research Center, Department of Basic Sciences, University of Kinshasa (UNIKIN), Democratic Republic Of Congo

3. c Congo Basin Water Resources Research Center – CRREBaC, University of Kinshasa (UNIKIN), Democratic Republic Of Congo

4. d Department of Agricultural Production, Makerere University College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Uganda, Kampala

5. e Institute for Water Research, Rhodes University, Makhanda (Grahams town) 6140, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract This study focuses on N'Djili River catchment, a vital water source in Kinshasa that undergoes anthropogenic pressure and land use changes. The lower course of the river is particularly affected by uncontrolled urbanization, informal settlements, improper waste management practices, and vegetation degradation. The aim of this study is to determine the relationship between land use and river water quality in this catchment. Water samples were collected for physico-chemical and bacteriological analysis from 10 sampling sites along the river course. Land use categories were determined using Sentinel-2 land cover imageries and buffer scaling techniques. A redundancy analysis (RDA) was conducted to determine the relationship between land use categories and water quality variables. The laboratory analysis revealed physical, chemical, and biological pollution of the river waters. The RDA results showed that 70% of water quality parameters were explained by the studied land use categories. The urbanized area was the most significant explanatory variable at all buffer scales, negatively impacting water quality parameters. Conversely, trees and range lands had a positive impact on water quality. The study concludes that further research is needed to assess the extent of water pollution and develop integrated management strategies for minimizing pollution in this catchment.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

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