Abstract
This study aims to evaluate existing approaches for monitoring and assessing water quality in waterbodies in the North of Ireland using newly developed methodologies. The results reveal significant differences between the new technique and the existing âone-out, all-outâ approach in rating water quality. The new approach found the water quality status to be âgood,â âfair,â and âmarginal,â whereas the existing âone-out, all-outâ technique classified water quality as âgood,â and âmoderate,â respectively. The new technique outperformed existing approaches in rating the water quality of different waterbody types, with high R2â¯=â¯1, NSEâ¯=â¯0.99, and MEFâ¯=â¯0 values. Furthermore, the final assessment of water quality using the new methodologies had the lowest uncertainty (1â¯%), whereas the efficiency measures (NSE and MEF) indicate that the new approaches are bias-free to assess water quality at any geographic scale. The results of this study reveal that the newly proposed methodologies are effective in assessing the water quality states of transitional and coastal waterbodies in the North of Ireland. The study also highlighted the limitations of existing approaches and the importance of updating water resource management systems for better protection of these waterbodies. The findings have significant implications for water resource management and planning in the North of Ireland and other similar regions.
| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Journal | Science Of The Total Environment |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2023 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Uddin, Md Galal,Jackson, Aoife,Nash, Stephen,Rahman, Azizur,Olbert, Agnieszka I.