Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, New York, New York, 10027, USA.
Center of Engineering, Modeling and Applied Social Sciences, Federal University of ABC, Santo André, SP, 09210-580, Brazil.
Ecol Appl. 2021 Oct;31(7):e02414. doi: 10.1002/eap.2414. Epub 2021 Aug 19.
Ensuring a sufficient and adequate supply of water for humans and ecosystems is a pressing environmental challenge. The expansion of agricultural and urban lands has jeopardized watershed ecosystem services and a changing climate poses additional risks for regional water supply. We used stream water quality data collected between 2000 and 2014, coupled with detailed precipitation and land cover information, to investigate the effects of landscape composition and short-term precipitation variability on the quality of water resources in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. The state is home to over 45 million people and has a long history of human landscape modification. A severe drought in 2014-2015 led to a major water crisis and highlighted the fragility of the regional water supply system. We found that human-dominated watersheds had lower overall water quality when compared to forested watersheds, with urban cover showing the most detrimental impacts on water quality. Forest cover was associated with a better overall water quality across the studied watersheds, with forested watersheds having low turbidity and high dissolved oxygen. High precipitation led to increased turbidity and fecal coliforms levels and lower dissolved oxygen in streams but these effects depended on watershed land cover. High precipitation diluted concentrations of nitrogen and dissolved solids in highly urbanized watersheds but exacerbated turbidity in pasture-dominated watersheds. Given the high costs of water treatment in densely populated regions, there is a pressing need to plan and manage landscapes in order to ensure adequate water resources. In tropical regions, maintaining or restoring native vegetation cover is a promising intervention to sustain adequate water quality.
确保人类和生态系统有充足和适当的水资源供应是一个紧迫的环境挑战。农业和城市土地的扩张危及了流域生态系统服务,气候变化给区域水资源供应带来了额外的风险。我们利用 2000 年至 2014 年期间收集的地表水水质数据,结合详细的降水和土地覆盖信息,研究了景观组成和短期降水变化对巴西圣保罗州水资源质量的影响。该州拥有超过 4500 万人口,有着悠久的人类景观改造历史。2014-2015 年的严重干旱导致了一场重大水危机,并凸显了该地区供水系统的脆弱性。我们发现,与森林流域相比,以人类为主导的流域整体水质较差,而城市覆盖对水质的影响最大。森林覆盖与整个研究流域的整体水质较好有关,森林流域的浊度较低,溶解氧较高。高降水导致溪流浊度和粪大肠菌群水平升高,溶解氧降低,但这些影响取决于流域的土地覆盖。高降水稀释了高度城市化流域中氮和溶解固体的浓度,但加剧了以牧场为主的流域的浊度。鉴于人口稠密地区的水处理成本高昂,迫切需要规划和管理景观,以确保有足够的水资源。在热带地区,维持或恢复本地植被覆盖是维持足够水质的一种有前途的干预措施。