Spatio-temporal variability in water quality and macroinvertebrates assemblage of Lunyangwa river, northern Malawi.
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Abstract
Freshwater ecosystems in Sub-Saharan Africa are experiencing severe degradation due to
agricultural expansion, urbanization, and poor sanitation, threatening the ecosystem services that
riparian communities depend on. This study examined how land use affects water quality and
benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages in the Lunyangwa River, Mzuzu City, Northern Malawi.
Macroinvertebrates and water quality parameters were sampled at nine stations across three land
use types (forested, agricultural, and urban; n=3 each) during dry (Oct-Nov 2024) and rainy (Feb
Apr 2025) seasons. Data were analyzed using diversity indices, water quality standards, and
multivariate statistics to assess spatial and temporal variation. Urban stations showed the most
severe degradation, with very poor water quality (WQI: 186.40–204.25), lowest dissolved oxygen
(3.07 ± 2.74 mg/L), highest biochemical oxygen demand (4.73 ± 1.17 mg/L), and
macroinvertebrate communities dominated by pollution-tolerant taxa like Bellamya capillata and
Tanypodinae, resulting in low diversity (Shannon H = 0.96). Agricultural stations displayed
intermediate conditions, while forested stations maintained the highest water quality and
macroinvertebrate diversity. Land use was the primary driver of variation in both water quality and
macroinvertebrate composition, with temperature, dissolved oxygen, BOD, pH, conductivity, and
salinity differing significantly among land-use types, while seasonal effects were minimal. The
findings demonstrate that macroinvertebrates are effective bioindicators of water quality and
provide scientific evidence for urgent conservation interventions, including riparian zone
protection, improved wastewater treatment, and regular biomonitoring programs for sustainable
river basin management in the Lunyangwa River and similar African freshwater systems.
