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Potential use of ionic species for identifying source land-uses of stormwater runoff

Authors
Lee, Dong HoonKim, Jin HwiMendoza, Joseph A.Lee, Chang-HeeKang, Joo-Hyon
Issue Date
Feb-2017
Publisher
IWA PUBLISHING
Keywords
critical source area; discriminant function analysis; ions; land-use; stormwater
Citation
WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, v.75, no.4, pp 978 - 986
Pages
9
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume
75
Number
4
Start Page
978
End Page
986
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/23323
DOI
10.2166/wst.2016.575
ISSN
0273-1223
1996-9732
Abstract
Identifying critical land-uses or source areas is important to prioritize resources for cost-effective stormwater management. This study investigated the use of information on ionic composition as a fingerprint to identify the source land-use of stormwater runoff. We used 12 ionic species in stormwater runoff monitored for a total of 20 storm events at five sites with different land-use compositions during the 2012-2014 wet seasons. A stepwise forward discriminant function analysis (DFA) with the jack-knifed cross validation approach was used to select ionic species that better discriminate the land-use of its source. Of the 12 ionic species, 9 species (K+, Mg2+, Na+, NH4+, Br-, Cl-, F-, NO2-, and SO42-) were selected for better performance of the DFA. The DFA successfully differentiated stormwater samples from urban, rural, and construction sites using concentrations of the ionic species (70%, 95%, and 91% of correct classification, respectively). Over 80% of the new data cases were correctly classified by the trained DFA model. When applied to data cases from a mixed land-use catchment and downstream, the DFA model showed the greater impact of urban areas and rural areas respectively in the earlier and later parts of a storm event.
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College of Engineering (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering)
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