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Monitoring water and habitat quality in six rivers draining the Mt. Kenya and Aberdare Catchments using Macroinvertebrates and Qualitative Habitat Scoring
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Citations
32
References
2014
Year
Unknown Venue
Mariara RiversEngineeringKarigu RiverHydrobiologyCatchment ScaleWatershed ManagementBiological IntegrityBenthic EcologyMonitoring WaterBiodiversityRiver Basin ManagementGeographyAberdare CatchmentsWater QualityQualitative HabitatRiver RestorationWater EcologyHydrologyWater ResourcesAffected Rivers
The study was conducted in June and September 2011 in six rivers that drain Mt. Kenya and the Aberdare catchments, i.e. Honi, Naro Moru, Liki, Sirimon, Mariara and Karigu. The main objective was to determine the ecological status of these rivers and identify macroinvertebrates with potential applicability as biomonitors. South African Scoring System version 5 (SASS-5), Multimetric Index (i.e. MI; values ranging from 0 = poor to natural = 1) and the Qualitative Habitat Assessment (QHA) methods were used in this study. Values more than 80% indicate largely unmodified systems (class B and A) whilst values below 40% indicate largely modified systems (classes, D, E and F). Class C (moderately modified systems fall within 60 – 79%). The highest number (16) of macroinvertebrate taxa were recorded at the Naro Moru and Mariara Rivers, while the lowest (3) was recorded at Karigu River. Macroinvertebrate abundance differed significantly among the rivers (One-way ANOVA, (F (5,135) = 3.533, p 0.6) while Honi and Mariara Rivers were of moderate water quality (MI = 0.40.6). Monitoring with macroinvertebrates enabled identification of anthropogenically affected rivers and placement of the study sites in their respective management classes for future interventions. Key words: Assessment, habitat, anthropogenic, freshwater ecosystems, water quality
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