Abstract:
The surface water quality is a matter of serious concern today. Rivers due to their role in carrying off
the municipal and industrial wastewater and run-off from agricultural land in their vast drainage
basins are among the most vulnerable water bodies to pollution. Awetu river is subjected to different
types of anthropogenic pressures varying in extent from upstream to downstream, thereby creating
spatial variability of water and habitat quality in the stream segment. The main objective of this study
was assessing water quality using physicochemical properties and benthicmacroinvertebrate metrics.
The assessment were assessed using physicochemical parameters, physical habitat assessment, biotic
indices /metrics , human activity by observation as well as macroinvertabretes samples from fifteen
sampling sites coded AWS1 to AWS15 along the river using the standard procedures. Six water quality
parameters were tested in situ, namely temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, total dissolved solid,
Electric conductivity and Turbidity by employing multi Prob analyzer. Other parameters namely
ammonia, total suspended solid, nitrate, nitrite, Ortho phosphate, total Phosphate, total suspended
solid, BOD5 and COD were tested in the laboratory. Benthic macroinvertebrates were sampled at
each sampling site using a rectangular frame net (20 × 30 cm) with a mesh size of 300 μm, and
identified to the family level following the standard methods in the laboratory. Water quality
paramaters were analyzed using standard methods while the habitat quality class was quantified using
the qualitative habitat evaluation index(QHEI). Multivariate statistical analyses were computed to
describe the macroinvertebrate assembledge. Benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages were
determined by, number of taxa, and the total number of individuals, by computing various indices.
Detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) was also applied to evaluate the relationship between
benthic macroinvertebrate community and physicochemical water parameters. The range values of
surface water temperature was 19.6 to 23.6°C, dissolved Oxygen 3.2 to 7.8mg/l, BOD5 4.5 to 6.7 mg/l,
EC 63 to 127μs/cm and NH4 -N 0.29 to 1.33 mg/l. A total of 1621 macroinvertebrates individuals
within 33 taxas belonging to 13 orders were identified from the 15 sampling sites. The most abundant
orders were: Ephemeroptera 31%, Trichoptera 18%, Odonata 15% and Diptera 10% represented by
14 families. The results revealed that macroinvertebrate distribution varied considerably with the
change in anthropogenic activities and habitat conditions in the study area. Upstream sites were
found to have significantly better ecological water quality than downstream sites based on indices and
metrics. The downstream sites were the most impacted by urbanization, had the poorest water quality
scores than upstream site