Forest loss often lowers water quality, study finds

May 2, 2023
A study combining water quality data with land cover projects finds that losing forested lands could raise total nitrogen, total phosphorus, and suspended sediment concentrations across a watershed.

A new study finds that, over the coming decades, many forested watersheds could be lost to development, lowering water quality and raising water treatment costs, according to press release from the U.S Department of Agriculture (USDA).

“To our knowledge, this is the first study to combine water quality data, land cover projections, and information about public water systems at a large scale,” says Peter Caldwell, a Forest Service researcher and lead author of the new study, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment.

The study’s research team focused on the forest-water connection in the southern U.S., a complex, heterogeneous region and, unfortunately, an ideal place for studying forest loss and worsening water quality. More than 80% of southern forests are privately owned, and the human population is growing.

More southern forests have been lost to development than anywhere else in the U.S. When forests are replaced by parking lots, neighborhoods, and other development, the loss is essentially irreversible.

"Our research team includes economists who will link water quality and water treatment costs," says Caldwell. "This line of research could one day inform programs that compensate private forest landowners for the ecosystem services their forested watersheds provide."

Water running off forested lands generally has lower concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorus, and suspended sediment than water leaving any other type of land.

“We examined small watersheds across a broad region,” says Katherine Martin, a researcher at North Carolina State University and a coauthor of the study. “From Virginia to Texas, and across different forest types, soils, topography, and hydroclimates, our results confirm that forests are important for water quality.”

But there are nuances to the connection between clean water and forests. Some individual forested watersheds can have lower water quality, perhaps because of the type of soil and rock in the watershed, or sediment erosion in the stream channel.

Nevertheless, losing forests to any other land use would likely result in lower water quality, the study suggests. For example, developing just 1% of forests upstream of an intake could result in an 0.4% increase in the concentration of suspended sediment in the water, on average.

Municipalities that draw water directly from rivers are at higher risk of lower water quality, now and in the future. Water drawn from a river instead of from a reservoir already tends to need more treatment before the water is drinkable. Municipalities that draw water from smaller watersheds also face higher risks, since any forest lost in a small watershed can represent a larger proportion of its area.

Protecting forested watersheds can help safeguard future drinking water supplies. In general, the more forested land upstream of the intake facility, the better the water quality.

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