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Title Stochastic sensitivity analysis of nitrogen pollution to climate change in a river basin with complex pollution sources
ID_Doc 14936
Authors Yang, XY; Tan, L; He, RM; Fu, GT; Ye, JY; Liu, Q; Wang, GQ
Title Stochastic sensitivity analysis of nitrogen pollution to climate change in a river basin with complex pollution sources
Year 2017
Published Environmental Science And Pollution Research, 24, 34
DOI 10.1007/s11356-017-0257-y
Abstract It is increasingly recognized that climate change could impose both direct and indirect impacts on the quality of the water environment. Previous studies have mostly concentrated on evaluating the impacts of climate change on non-point source pollution in agricultural watersheds. Few studies have assessed the impacts of climate change on the water quality of river basins with complex point and non-point pollution sources. In view of the gap, this paper aims to establish a framework for stochastic assessment of the sensitivity of water quality to future climate change in a river basin with complex pollution sources. A sub-daily soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) model was developed to simulate the discharge, transport, and transformation of nitrogen from multiple point and non-point pollution sources in the upper Huai River basin of China. A weather generator was used to produce 50 years of synthetic daily weather data series for all 25 combinations of precipitation (changes by -10, 0, 10, 20, and 30%) and temperature change (increases by 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 degrees C) scenarios. The generated daily rainfall series was disaggregated into the hourly scale and then used to drive the subdaily SWAT model to simulate the nitrogen cycle under different climate change scenarios. Our results in the study region have indicated that (1) both total nitrogen (TN) loads and concentrations are insensitive to temperature change; (2) TN loads are highly sensitive to precipitation change, while TN concentrations are moderately sensitive; (3) the impacts of climate change on TN concentrations are more spatiotemporally variable than its impacts on TN loads; and (4) wide distributions of TN loads and TN concentrations under individual climate change scenario illustrate the important role of climatic variability in affecting water quality conditions. In summary, the large variability in SWAT simulation results within and between each climate change scenario highlights the uncertainty of the impacts of climate change and the need to incorporate extreme conditions in managing water environment and developing climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies.
Author Keywords Climate change; Complex pollution sources; Nitrogen; Sensitivity analysis; SWAT; Upper Huai River basin
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000417372600033
WoS Category Environmental Sciences
Research Area Environmental Sciences & Ecology
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