Understanding links between water-quality variables and nitrate concentration in freshwater streams using high-frequency sensor data
Claire Kermorvant, Benoit Liquet, Guy Litt, Kerrie Mengersen, Erin, Peterson, Rob Hyndman, Jeremy B. Jones Jr., and Catherine Leigh

TL;DR
This study uses high-frequency sensor data and advanced statistical models to understand how various water quality variables relate to nitrate concentrations across different freshwater sites, aiding better management strategies.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a unified modeling approach can effectively explain nitrate variability across diverse environmental conditions using common water quality variables.
Findings
High deviance explained by models at all sites.
Consistent explanatory variables across sites.
Models aid in targeted water quality monitoring and management.
Abstract
Real time monitoring using in situ sensors is becoming a common approach for measuring water quality within watersheds. High frequency measurements produce big data sets that present opportunities to conduct new analyses for improved understanding of water quality dynamics and more effective management of rivers and streams. Of primary importance is enhancing knowledge of the relationships between nitrate, one of the most reactive forms of inorganic nitrogen in the aquatic environment, and other water quality variables. We analysed high frequency water quality data from in situ sensors deployed in three sites from different watersheds and climate zones within the National Ecological Observatory Network, USA. We used generalised additive mixed models to explain the nonlinear relationships at each site between nitrate concentration and conductivity, turbidity, dissolved oxygen, water…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFish Ecology and Management Studies · Soil and Water Nutrient Dynamics · Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies
