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Research Article
ScienceAsia 32 (2006): 071-081 |doi: 10.2306/scienceasia1513-1874.2006.32.071
Water Quality Modeling in the Nam Pong River,
Northeast Thailand
Chanchai Sangsurasak,a Hsin-Neng Hsieh,b* Wirach Wongphathanakulc and Wanpen
Wirojanagudd
ABSTRACT: Poor water quality which caused massive fish kills in the Nam Pong River in 1999 was associated
with low dissolved oxygen (DO). A dynamic water quality model was thus constructed using data collected
for 2 years from 1999-2000 to predict whether there was an algal bloom which subsequently died off and
caused low DO and fish kills on the same day in 1999. Flow and runoff were calibrated by using lignin and
tannin (LT) as a conservative trace. Root mean square error (RMSE) of the flow calibration with LT was
comparable with literature values, using salinity as a conservative trace. Results of correlation coefficients
(R2) from the runoff calibration were reasonable (0.64-0.75 for 1999 and 0.62-0.88 for 2000). RMSE values
from the model calibration and validation of conventional nutrients were found to be comparable to literature
values for steady-state models. The predictive capability for chlorophyll a showed that, with the flow
calibrated from LT, the bloom was not overestimated. The model predicted the bloom die-off which lowered
DO and possibly caused fish kills on the same day in 1999, and suggested that the accuracy of the dynamic
model was on a time scale of days, not seasons like most steady-state models.
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a National Research Center for Environmental and Hazardous Waste Management, Chulalongkorn
University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand.
b Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, New Jersey
07102, USA.
c Department of Chemistry, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002, Thailand.
d Department of Environmental Engineering, Khon Kaen University, Khon Kaen 40002, Thailand.
* Corresponding author, E-mail: hsieh@adm.njit.edu
Received 24 Nov 2004, Accepted 27 Jul 2005
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