Human Activities Increase the Nitrogen in Surface Water on the Eastern Loess Plateau

Author:

Hu Yuxian1ORCID,Zhang Ke1,Li Yuan1ORCID,Sun Yanan2,Li Hongyan1,Yang Gaiqiang1

Affiliation:

1. School of Environment Science and Engineering, Taiyuan University of Science and Technology, Taiyuan, Shanxi 030024, China

2. Ecology and Environment Bureau of Lvliang City, Lvliang, Shanxi 033000, China

Abstract

Human activities have greatly accelerated the input of nitrogen into waters, resulting in water quality degradation. Facing the water crisis of nitrogen pollution, the state of surface water in arid areas needs close attention. Although numerous studies have indicated that waters’ nitrogen is often impacted by land use covers, the correlation between the two remains obscure. This paper explored the spatial relationship between anthropogenic activity and waters’ nitrogen on the eastern Loess Plateau, based on the Geographic Information System (GIS) spatial analysis using land use covers. There were 3 human land use types and 2 nitrogen indices used to assess the rivers’ state at the watershed scale. The results showed that rivers’ nitrogen was closely associated with human land use covers. Nitrogen pollution was most serious in urban areas. This study provided new evidence for the relationship between anthropogenic activities and river ecology. The findings may be helpful for policymakers to make strategic decisions of water resource management and land use planning in arid areas.

Funder

Shanxi Provincial Key Research and Development Project

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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