A. Cattaneo et Yt. Prairie, TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN THE CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS ALONG THE RIVIERE DE LACHIGAN - HOW MANY SAMPLES ARE NECESSARY TO DESCRIBE STREAM CHEMISTRY, Canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences, 52(4), 1995, pp. 828-835
We examined the temporal variability of several chemical characteristi
cs at 12 different sites in a river system of the Laurentian region of
Quebec. Mean-variance relationships (log-log) differed considerably a
mong chemical variables with slopes ranging from about 1.3 to over 5.
Guidelines and equations are given to help decide how many samples sho
uld be taken to obtain a mean value with an error of 20% or less for t
he different chemical variables. Relative temporal variabilities (coef
ficients of variation) were highest for nutrients and lowest for pH, a
lkalinity, and conductivity. Data from the same sites but for differen
t years showed no systematic differences and similarly mean-variance r
elationships for TP and TDP obtained from a different region were not
significantly different suggesting a wider applicability to our result
s. We also show that although the temporal variability of chlorophyll
in streams is similar to that found in lakes, the same does not apply
to phosphorus, which is about two to three times more variable in stre
ams.