2016
DOI: 10.3390/w8040158
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Quantifying Spatial Changes in the Structure of Water Quality Constituents in a Large Prairie River within Two Frameworks of a Water Quality Model

Abstract: Abstract:A global sensitivity analysis was carried out on a water quality model to quantify the spatial changes in parameter sensitivity of a model of a large prairie river, the South Saskatchewan River (SSR). The method is used to assess the relative impacts of major nutrient loading sources and a reservoir on the river's water quality. The river completely freezes over during winter; hence, the sensitivity analysis was carried out seasonally, for winter and summer, to account for the influence of ice-covered… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…WASP is intended to assist in the interpretation and prediction of water quality responses to both natural phenomena and man-made pollution and water management impacts and, in this way, to support management decision making. The WASP model incorporates several different kinetic modules and has been applied to model various water quality processes, including eutrophication (Ernst & Owens, 2009), phytoplankton, nutrient dynamics (Akomeah, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2015;Hosseini, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2016;Hosseini, Chun, Wheater, & Lindenschmidt, 2017), metal transport and transformation (Carroll et al, 2000;Caruso & Bishop, 2009;Lin, Larssen, Vogt, Feng, & Zhang, 2011), and the transport and fate of toxicants (Franceschini & Tsai, 2010;Meric et al, 2013). The WASP model incorporates several different kinetic modules and has been applied to model various water quality processes, including eutrophication (Ernst & Owens, 2009), phytoplankton, nutrient dynamics (Akomeah, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2015;Hosseini, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2016;Hosseini, Chun, Wheater, & Lindenschmidt, 2017), metal transport and transformation (Carroll et al, 2000;Caruso & Bishop, 2009;Lin, Larssen, Vogt, Feng, & Zhang, 2011), and the transport and fate of toxicants (Franceschini & Tsai, 2010;Meric et al, 2013).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…WASP is intended to assist in the interpretation and prediction of water quality responses to both natural phenomena and man-made pollution and water management impacts and, in this way, to support management decision making. The WASP model incorporates several different kinetic modules and has been applied to model various water quality processes, including eutrophication (Ernst & Owens, 2009), phytoplankton, nutrient dynamics (Akomeah, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2015;Hosseini, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2016;Hosseini, Chun, Wheater, & Lindenschmidt, 2017), metal transport and transformation (Carroll et al, 2000;Caruso & Bishop, 2009;Lin, Larssen, Vogt, Feng, & Zhang, 2011), and the transport and fate of toxicants (Franceschini & Tsai, 2010;Meric et al, 2013). The WASP model incorporates several different kinetic modules and has been applied to model various water quality processes, including eutrophication (Ernst & Owens, 2009), phytoplankton, nutrient dynamics (Akomeah, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2015;Hosseini, Chun, & Lindenschmidt, 2016;Hosseini, Chun, Wheater, & Lindenschmidt, 2017), metal transport and transformation (Carroll et al, 2000;Caruso & Bishop, 2009;Lin, Larssen, Vogt, Feng, & Zhang, 2011), and the transport and fate of toxicants (Franceschini & Tsai, 2010;Meric et al, 2013).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lower SSR, from Gardiner Dam to the confluence with the North Saskatchewan River, was discretized into 673 longitudinal segments, each 500 m in length (Hosseini et al, 2016). Hydrodynamic data were estimated using 187 surveyed cross-sectional profiles extracted from a hydrologic Engineering Center River Analysis System model based on annual mean flow provided by the Water Security Agency (Hosseini, Chun, et al, 2017).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hosseini et al [75] and Meissner et al [76,77] used different modelling approaches to determine the effects of spatial variability and indicators on aquatic ecology. Hosseini et al [75] applied a deterministic water quality model to determine the impact of location along a river on the sensitivity of ecological parameters (e.g., oxygen demand and growth rate) to water-quality variables (e.g., dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll-a concentrations).…”
Section: In-stream Geomorphologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hosseini et al [75] applied a deterministic water quality model to determine the impact of location along a river on the sensitivity of ecological parameters (e.g., oxygen demand and growth rate) to water-quality variables (e.g., dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll-a concentrations). The difference in their spatial extents consisted of reaches of the same river, upstream and downstream of a large Prairie reservoir.…”
Section: In-stream Geomorphologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the addition of the wetting and drying capability , ROMS is suitable for modeling tidal dynamics and water circulation, temperature, salinity, and sediment transport in a shallow, back-barrier estuary. The Water Quality Analysis Simulation Program (WASP; Ambrose et al, 1988;Di Toro, Fitzpatrick, and Thomann, 1983;Wool, Davie, and Rodriguez, 2003), developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), incorporates watershed nutrient loading and internal nutrient cycling to calculate dissolved oxygen (DO), oxygen demand, nutrient concentrations, sediment, and phytoplankton dynamics and has been widely used for water-quality and TMDL assessment in rivers, reservoirs, lakes, and estuaries (Abdelrhman, 2015;Camacho et al, 2014;Franceschini and Tsai, 2010;Hosseini, Chun, and Lindenschmidt, 2016;Kaufman, 2011;Lindenschmidt, 2006 and references therein;Tetra Tech, 2012, 2015. WASP can receive hydrodynamic information from other models (EFDC, DYNHYD, RIVMOD, CE-QUAL-RIV1, SWMM) through a binary hydrodynamic linkage file; however, a coupling between ROMS and WASP was not available prior to this study.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%