4.3.10. Water Quality
Water in rivers, aquifers, and lakes naturally contains many dissolved materials,
depending on atmospheric inputs, geological conditions, and climate. These materials
define the waters chemical characteristics. Its biological characteristics
are defined by the flora and fauna within the water body, and temperature, sediment
load, and color are important physical characteristics. Water quality
is a function of chemical, physical, and biological characteristics but is a
value-laden term because it implies quality in relation to some standard. Different
uses of water have different standards. Pollution can be broadly defined as
deterioration of some aspect of the chemical, physical, or biological characteristics
of water (its quality) to such an extent that it impacts some use
of that water or ecosystems within the water. Major water pollutants include
organic material, which causes oxygen deficiency in water bodies; nutrients,
which cause excessive growth of algae in lakes and coastal areasknown
as eutrophication (leading to algal blooms, which may be toxic and consume large
amounts of oxygen when decaying); and toxic heavy metals and organic compounds.
The severity of water pollution is governed by the intensity of pollutants and
the assimilation capacity of receiving water bodieswhich depends on the
physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of streamflow but not
all pollutants can be degraded, however.
Chemical river water quality is a function of the chemical load applied to
the river, water temperature, and the volume of flow. The load is determined
by catchment geological and land-use characteristics, as well as by human activities
in the catchment: Agriculture, industry, and public water use also may result
in the input of polluting substances. Agricultural inputs are most
likely to be affected by climate change because a changing climate might alter
agricultural practices. A changing climate also may alter chemical processes
in the soil, including chemical weathering (White and Blum, 1995). Avila et
al. (1996) simulated a substantial increase in base cation weathering rates
in Spain when temperature and precipitation increased (although if precipitation
were reduced, the effects of the higher temperature were offset). This, in turn,
resulted in an increase in concentrations of base cations such as calcium, sodium,
and potassium and an increase in streamwater alkalinity. Warmer, drier conditions,
for example, promote mineralization of organic nitrogen (Murdoch et al., 2000)
and thus increase the potential supply to the river or groundwater. Load also
is influenced by the processes by which water reaches the river channel. Nitrates,
for example, frequently are flushed into rivers in intense storms following
prolonged dry periods.
River water temperature depends not only on atmospheric temperature but also
on wind and solar radiation (Orlob et al., 1996). River water temperature will
increase by a slightly lesser amount than air temperature (Pilgrim et al., 1998),
with the smallest increases in catchments with large contributions from groundwater.
Biological and chemical processes in river water are dependent on water temperature:
Higher temperatures alone would lead to increases in concentrations of some
chemical species but decreases in others. Dissolved oxygen concentrations are
lower in warmer water, and higher temperatures also would encourage the growth
of algal blooms, which consume oxygen on decomposition.
Streamwater quality, however, also will be affected by streamflow volumes,
affecting both concentrations and total loads. Carmichael et al. (1996), for
example, show how higher temperatures and lower summer flows could combine in
the Nitra River, Slovakia, to produce substantial reductions in dissolved oxygen
concentrations. Research in Finland (Frisk et al., 1997; Kallio et al., 1997)
indicates that changes in stream water quality, in terms of eutrophication and
nutrient transport, are very dependent on changes in streamflow. For a given
level of inputs, a reduction in streamflow might lead to increases in peak concentrations
of certain chemical compounds. Cruise et al. (1999) simulated increased concentrations
of nitrate in the southeast United States, for example, but the total amount
transported from a catchment might decrease. Hanratty and Stefan (1998) simulated
reductions in nitrate and phosphate loads in a small Minnesota catchment, largely
as a result of reductions in runoff. Alexander et al. (1996) suggest that nutrient
loadings to receiving coastal zones would vary primarily with streamflow volume.
Increased streamflow draining toward the Atlantic coast of the United States
under many scenarios, for example, would lead to increased nutrient loadings.
An increased frequency of heavy rainfall would adversely affect water quality
by increasing pollutant loads flushed into rivers and possibly by causing overflows
of sewers and waste storage facilities. Polluting material also may be washed
into rivers and lakes following inundation of waste sites and other facilities
located on floodplains.
Water temperature in lakes responds to climate change in more complicated ways
because thermal stratification is formed in summer, as well as in colder regions
in winter. Meyer et al. (1999) evaluated the effect of climate change on thermal
stratification by simulation for hypothetical lakes. They show that lakes in
subtropic zones (about latitude 30 to 45°) and in subpolar zones (latitude
65 to 80°) are subject to greater relative changes in thermal stratification
patterns than mid-latitude or equatorial lakes and that deep lakes are more
sensitive than shallow lakes in the subtropic zones. Hostetler and Small (1999)
simulated potential impacts on hypothetical shallow and deep lakes across North
America, showing widespread increases in lake water temperature slightly below
the increase in air temperature in the scenarios used. The greatest increases
were in lakes that were simulated to experience substantial reductions in the
duration of ice cover; the boundary of ice-free conditions shifted northward
by 10° of latitude or more (1,000 km). Fang and Stefan (1997) show by simulation
that winter stratification in cold regions would be weakened and the anoxic
zone would disappear. Observations during droughts in the boreal region of northwestern
Ontario show that lower inflows and higher temperatures produce a deepening
of the thermocline (Schindler et al., 1996).
The consequences of these direct changes to water quality of polluted water
bodies may be profound, as summarized by Varis and Somlyody (1996) for lakes.
Increases in temperature would deteriorate water quality in most polluted water
bodies by increasing oxygen-consuming biological activities and decreasing the
saturation concentration of dissolved oxygen. Hassan et al. (1998a,b) employed
a downscaled climate model combined with GCM output to predict future stratification
for Suwa Lake, Japan, on a daily basis, as well as for the prolonged summer
stratification period. They predict increased growth of phytoplankton and reduced
dissolved oxygen concentrations at different depths in the lake. Analysis of
past observations in Lake Biwa in Japan (Fushimi, 1999) suggests that dissolved
oxygen concentrations also tend to reduce when air (and lake water) temperature
is higher.
Water quality in many rivers, lakes, and aquifers, however, is heavily dependent
on direct and indirect human activities. Land-use and agricultural practices
have a very significant effect on water quality, as do management actions to
control point and nonpoint source pollution and treat wastewaters discharged
into the environment. In such water bodies, future water quality will be very
dependent on future human activities, including water management policies, and
the direct effect of climate change may be very small in relative terms (Hanratty
and Stefan, 1998). Considerable effort is being expended in developed and developing
countries to improve water quality (Sections 4.5 and 4.6),
and these efforts will have very significant implications for the impact of
climate change on water quality.
Confidence in estimates of change in water quality is determined partly by
climate change scenarios (and their effects on streamflow), but additional uncertainty
is added by current lack of detailed understanding of some of the process interactions
involved.
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