Global river water quality degradation severely impairs aquatic ecosystem stability and human health, highlighting the urgency of spatiotemporal analysis for management guidance. Based on 2014–2024 monitoring data from the Quzhou Section of Qiantang River Basin, this study adopted the Water Quality Index (WQI) and statistical methods (PCA, Mann–Kendall test) to explore the spatiotemporal characteristics of water quality across the basin. Results showed an overall mean WQI of 79.26 (classified as “Good”), with general stability, localized fluctuations, and a stable-then-declining trend, mirroring an imbalance between governance effects and emerging pollution pressures. It identifies a critical governance phase focused on securing the current good water quality and curbing the trend of further deterioration. Water quality exhibited distinct variations: upper reaches > lower reaches, tributaries > mainstreams, with priority required for the Wuxi River’s declining WQI and the Qu River’s persistently low WQI. TN, TP, and NH3-N were identified as key factors coupled with land use patterns. A differentiated strategy prioritizing nitrogen control, synergizing phosphorus–oxygen management, and reducing organics is thus proposed. This study provides scientific references for water quality assessment and targeted aquatic ecological governance in the basin and similar river networks.
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Wenhai Luo
Danxia Liu
Jing Chen
Water
Hohai University
Quzhou University
Zhejiang Tongji Vocational College of Science and Technology
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Luo et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/698434dff1d9ada3c1fb3839 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/w18030386