Mutual relationships of suspended sediment, turbidity and visual clarity in New Zealand rivers

D. J. Ballantine, A. O. Hughes, R. J. Davies-Colley

Research output: Chapter in Book or Report/Conference proceedingConference Proceedingpeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Many river water quality monitoring programmes do not measure suspended particulate matter (SPM) mass concentrations despite significant interest in its multiple effects on aquatic ecosystems. Regular monthly sampling usually intercepts rivers in baseflow when suspended sediment mass concentrations and fluxes are relatively low and not of particular interest. New Zealand's National Rivers Water Quality Network (NRWQN) is probably typical in not measuring SPM mass, although visual clarity and nephelometric turbidity are routinely measured. In order to better characterize SPM in NZ rivers, total suspended sediment (TSS) was temporarily added to the NRWQN. Turbidity, visual clarity and TSS are mutually inter-related over all 77 sites, although with considerable data scatter. However, within individual rivers turbidity and visual clarity are typically fairly closely related to TSS and provide fair to excellent surrogates. Therefore, TSS need not be measured routinely because it can be estimated with sufficient precision for many purposes from visibility or turbidity.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationSediment Dynamics from the Summit to the Sea
EditorsSamuel J. Bentley, Y. Jun Xu, Adrian L. Collins, Mike Stone, Mead A. Allison, Arthur J. Horowitz, Wayne D. Erskine, Valentin Golosov
PublisherCopernicus GmbH
Pages265-271
Number of pages7
ISBN (Electronic)9781907161452
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
EventInternational Symposium on Sediment Dynamics: From the Summit to the Sea, ICCE 2014 - New Orleans, United States
Duration: 11 Dec 201414 Dec 2014

Publication series

NameIAHS-AISH Proceedings and Reports
Volume367
ISSN (Print)0144-7815

Conference

ConferenceInternational Symposium on Sediment Dynamics: From the Summit to the Sea, ICCE 2014
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNew Orleans
Period11/12/1414/12/14

Keywords

  • river monitoring
  • total suspended sediment
  • turbidity
  • visual clarity

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Mutual relationships of suspended sediment, turbidity and visual clarity in New Zealand rivers'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this