Drainage Ratio Controls Phytoplankton Abundance in Urban Lakes

Author:

Guo Weijie1,Li Ziqian2ORCID,Li Cai3,Liu Boyi2,Shi Wenqing2

Affiliation:

1. Basin Water Environmental Research Department, Changjiang River Scientific Research Institute, Wuhan 430010, China

2. Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of Atmospheric Environment and Equipment Technologies, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Atmospheric Environmental Monitoring & Pollution Control, School of Environmental Science & Engineering, Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, Nanjing 210044, China

3. Changjiang Spatial Information Technology Engineering Co., Ltd., Wuhan 430010, China

Abstract

Urban lakes located in densely populated regions are highly vulnerable freshwater ecosystems compared to lakes in rural areas due to intense anthropogenic activities. However, the impacts of intrinsic lake morphometry on the water quality of urban lakes remain unclear. In the present study, the water quality of 14 lakes and the underlying factors associated with such quality were explored in Wuhan City, China. Of these surveyed urban lakes, 92.9% were eutrophic or hypereutrophic; phytoplankton biomass ranged between 3.2 and 62.0 mg/L and was positively correlated with drainage ratio values (catchment area/lake area) during the phytoplankton bloom season. These results are consistent with the fact that small lakes associated with a large watershed area generally exhibit high levels of areal nutrient accumulation that rise with the drainage ratio, supporting phytoplankton growth. There were no significant differences in phytoplankton diversity among lakes (p > 0.05), remaining stable at the low Shannon index of 1.9–2.9, which is possibly due to high eutrophication pressure and similar local climatic conditions across the relatively limited study area. Overall, the results of this study will provide a valuable foundation for future efforts to improve water quality management efforts for urban lakes.

Funder

the Fundamental Research Funds for Central Public Welfare Research Institutes

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Starting Research Fund of Nanjing University of Information Engineering

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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