Water quality directly affects the health of crops, livestock, and aquatic ecosystems. In agricultural and horticultural contexts, water is used for irrigation, stock drinking, chemical dilution, washing produce and processing. Poor water quality can reduce yields, harm animal health, contaminate produce, damage irrigation infrastructure, and degrade receiving waterways. The VCAA Study Design specifies six key water quality parameters: nitrogen, phosphorus, dissolved oxygen, pH, electrical conductivity (EC), and turbidity.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Each water quality parameter has a measurable ideal range for agricultural use. Monitoring and managing these parameters is essential for sustainable production and compliance with environmental regulations.
Forms in water: nitrate (NO₃⁻), nitrite (NO₂⁻), ammonium (NH₄⁺)
Agricultural sources of excess nitrogen:
- Leaching of nitrogen fertilisers from cropped land
- Livestock waste (manure, urine) entering waterways
- Effluent from feedlots and dairy sheds
- Decomposition of plant material
Impacts:
- Eutrophication: Excess N (and P) promotes algal blooms in waterways; algae decomposition depletes dissolved oxygen, causing fish kills
- Blue-baby syndrome (methemoglobinaemia): Nitrates in drinking water (>50 mg/L) are harmful to infants and livestock
- Algal toxins: Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) produce toxins harmful to livestock and wildlife
EXAM TIP: Describe eutrophication as a chain reaction: excess nutrients → algal bloom → algae die → bacterial decomposition consumes DO → fish and other aquatic organisms die. This sequence is commonly examined.
Forms in water: phosphate (PO₄³⁻), particulate P (attached to sediment)
Agricultural sources:
- Fertiliser runoff from paddocks (particularly after rain on recently fertilised land)
- Soil erosion carrying P-enriched topsoil into streams
- Livestock waste and dairy effluent
Impacts:
- Eutrophication: P is often the limiting nutrient in freshwater systems; even low concentrations (>0.05 mg/L) can trigger algal growth
- P is strongly adsorbed to soil particles — control erosion to control P losses
- Phosphorus does not have a direct toxicity risk to livestock at typical water concentrations
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes focus only on nitrogen as the cause of eutrophication. In freshwater systems, phosphorus is usually the limiting nutrient and therefore the primary eutrophication driver. Both must be managed.
Definition: The concentration of oxygen gas dissolved in water, essential for aquatic respiration.
Units: mg/L or % saturation (100% saturation ≈ 9 mg/L at 20°C, sea level)
Causes of low DO:
- Decomposition of organic matter by aerobic bacteria (consumes O₂)
- Algal bloom death and decomposition
- High water temperatures (warm water holds less dissolved gas)
- Stagnant, slow-moving water
Impacts:
- DO < 5 mg/L: Stress in most fish
- DO < 2 mg/L: Lethal for most aquatic organisms
- Low DO environments promote anaerobic processes producing methane and hydrogen sulfide
VCAA FOCUS: Know that dissolved oxygen is inversely related to water temperature — warm water holds less DO. This is relevant to summer heat stress on aquatic ecosystems linked to climate change.
Definition: A measure of hydrogen ion [H⁺] concentration; the logarithmic scale from 0–14 (pH 7 = neutral; <7 = acid; >7 = alkaline/basic).
Optimal ranges:
- Irrigation water: pH 5.5–8.0 (most crops tolerate this range)
- Stock water: pH 6.5–8.5
- Hydroponic nutrient solutions: typically pH 5.5–6.5
Agricultural water pH issues:
- Acidic water (pH < 5.5) may corrode metal irrigation infrastructure and release toxic metals from soil
- Very alkaline water (pH > 8.5) can cause calcium and magnesium to precipitate out of solution
- Acidic drainage from acid sulfate soils (pH can drop to <4.0) is highly toxic to aquatic life
STUDY HINT: The pH scale is logarithmic — a change of one pH unit represents a tenfold change in hydrogen ion concentration. pH 4 is ten times more acidic than pH 5.
Definition: A measure of the ability of water (or a soil solution) to conduct electricity, indicating the total concentration of dissolved salts (ions).
Units: dS/m or mS/cm; 1 dS/m ≈ 640 mg/L total dissolved solids.
Thresholds for irrigation water:
| EC (dS/m) | Effect on Crops |
|---|---|
| < 0.7 | Suitable for all crops |
| 0.7 – 3.0 | Suitable for tolerant crops (olives, cotton) |
| > 3.0 | Severe restriction; only halophytes can survive |
Livestock water thresholds: Cattle: < 5.6 dS/m; Sheep: < 11 dS/m
Impacts of high EC:
- Osmotic stress: High salt concentrations reduce plant root water uptake
- Specific ion toxicity: Sodium and chloride at high concentrations directly toxic to sensitive plants
- Soil structural damage: High sodium (SAR) causes clay dispersion and reduced permeability
REMEMBER: EC measures all dissolved ions — it does not distinguish between nutritious ions (Ca²⁺, NO₃⁻) and harmful ones (Na⁺, Cl⁻). Context and ion-specific testing are required for a complete assessment.
Definition: A measure of the cloudiness or haziness of water caused by suspended particles (sediment, organic matter, algae, colloidal clay).
Units: NTU (Nephelometric Turbidity Units); measured using a turbidity meter (nephelometer).
Agricultural sources: Soil erosion and runoff from bare paddocks; livestock access to waterways; algal blooms.
Impacts:
- Blocks light penetration into waterways, reducing aquatic plant photosynthesis
- Sediment smothers aquatic macroinvertebrates and fish breeding habitat
- Suspended particles can clog drip irrigation emitters
- Indicates active erosion and nutrient loss from paddocks
Irrigation guideline: < 50 NTU recommended for drip/microjet systems; < 100 NTU for surface irrigation.
| Parameter | Ideal Range (Irrigation) | Issue if Exceeded | Measurement Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen | < 10 mg N/L | Eutrophication, toxicity | Nitrate test kit, colorimetry |
| Phosphorus | < 0.1 mg P/L | Eutrophication | Colorimetric analysis |
| Dissolved O₂ | > 5 mg/L | Aquatic organism stress | DO meter |
| pH | 5.5 – 8.0 | Corrosion, nutrient availability | pH meter |
| EC | < 0.7 dS/m | Osmotic stress, ion toxicity | EC meter |
| Turbidity | < 50 NTU (drip) | Clogging, sedimentation | Turbidity meter |
APPLICATION: When designing a water quality monitoring program for a farm, select test parameters based on the most likely risks for that enterprise. An irrigated vegetable farm near cattle-grazed upstream land should prioritise EC, nitrates, and turbidity as key monitoring parameters.