GLOBE Water Quality Data After Three Years: An Emerging International Resource

R.C. Bales, C.J. Peters, M.H. Conklin.
Dept. of Hydrology and Water Resources
University of Arizona
Presented at the 1998 Spring Meeting of the American Geophysical Union

INTRODUCTION

Students involved in the GLOBE (Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment) program have collected water quality data from sites all over the world since 1995. In the United States the GLOBE program provides what is currently the most easily accessible nationwide data base of selected surface water quality measurements. GLOBE data are readily accessible via the www, and the methods used for data collection and quality control are documented on the www. Most data are available within hours after being submitted by the K-12 schools doing the sampling and analyses. Procedures are in place for data retrieval and display.

Volunteer water quality monitoring programs such as GLOBE provide scientists with spatially distributed information on water quality at scales ranging from local to global. However, the very nature of a distributed volunteer monitoring program such as GLOBE often raises quality control questions.

The purpose of this comparison is to evaluate the quality of GLOBE data relative to other water quality data sets, specifically the U.S. Geological Survey National Stream Water-Quality Monitoring Network and the volunteer Rivers of Colorado Water Watch Network.


DESCRIPTION OF DATA SETS

GLOBE

The GLOBE hydrology data consist of measurements taken at nearly 1,200 sites throughout the world by K-12 students. The data are reported via the Internet to a central data repository. GLOBE data for any site can be downloaded by anyone with an Internet connection. In addition to water quality parameters, GLOBE schools measure air temperature, land cover, soil moisture, biology, and more. The period of record is 1995 to the present, with new locations constantly being added.

United States Geological Survey

The USGS data are currently available on CD-ROM. Data are available for over 600 monitoring stations throughout the United States.

Rivers of Colorado Water Watch Network

This set consists of data from 260 sampling locations in the state of Colorado. In addition to the water quality parameters studied here, Colorado Riverwatch monitors discharge and trace metals. The program began in 1990 and is administered by the Colorado Division of Wildlife.

METHODS

Extreme Values

The mean, minimum, and maximum value were determined for each water quality parameter (water temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, alkalinity, and electrical conductivity) at each GLOBE sampling location. The relative frequency of each was plotted. Means and standard deviations were calculated for each parameter in each of the three data sets.

Distribution of Means

The relative frequency of the means for each parameter at each site was plotted for each monitoring program to assess how well the distributions of mean values corresponded.

RESULTS


CONCLUSIONS

The GLOBE data set is comparable to volunteer monitoring programs (such as Colorado Riverwatch) and governmental programs (USGS) in terms of mean values and standard deviations for common water quality parameters. GLOBE dissolved oxygen measurements are generally lower, which may be the result of sampling a wider variety of water body types.

The quality control procedures established by GLOBE are at least as good as those of other volunteer programs, although some follow-up is needed to address alkalinity questions. QA/QC problems are dealt with on a case-by-case basis. GLOBE data are helping to fill a clear need for spatially distributed, regular information on water quality at local to continental scales for a variety of research, assessment, planning and educational activities.

The wide distribution of study sites, long duration of monitoring, readily accessible data base and overall institutional support place GLOBE at the forefront of efforts to bridge critical gaps in water quality data.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This project was supported by GLOBE. Thanks to Barbara Horn with the Colorado Dept. of Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife for assistance in obtaining data. Special thanks to Ray Brice for his computer skills and poster preparation expertise. Thanks to Anne Kramer for help in preparing this poster.
Last updated 13 July 1998
Comments?roger@hwr.arizona.edu