• Alternate Text

Water Institute - WI
Journal of Water Resources, Engineering, Management and Policy

JWEMPO

  • Home
  • Articles & Issues
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Articles
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Aims and Scope of Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Copyright
    • Indexed
    • Publication Guidelines
  • Information
    • For Authors
    • For Reviewers
    • For Readers
  • News
  • contact
  • Subscribe
  • Submit Article
  • Login/Register
  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Archives
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Aims and Scope of Journal
    • Submissions
    • Editorial Team
    • Privacy Statement
    • Copyright
    • Indexed
    • Publication Guidelines
  • Information
    • For Authors
    • For Reviewers
    • For Readers
  • Articles
  • News
  • contact
  • Subscribe
  • Submit Article
  • Login/Register

© 2026 Journal of Water Resources, Engineering, Management and Policy

Search Article
  • Home
  • Journal
Management in Water sector
  • Ahmad Adam Nyagongo, Vedasto Gabriel Ndibalema, Makarius Christian Sengilinga Lalika
  • 12 December 2025 162 37
Ecological Health Assessment of Lukosi River Using Macroinvertebrate and Riparian Vegetation Indicators, in Iringa, Tanzania
DOI: https://doi.org/10.56542/wi.jwempo.v2.i2.a13.2025
Download / view PDF

Keywords: Ecological health, Lukosi river Catchment, Macroinvertebrates, Riparian vegetation, Bioindicators

Abstract
The health of river ecosystems is increasingly threatened by human activities such as agriculture, urbanization, and industrialization. This study evaluates the ecological status of the Lukosi River Catchment (LRC) in Kilolo District, Iringa, Tanzania, using macroinvertebrates and riparian vegetation as bioindicators. We employed a cross-sectional design, sampling at upstream, midstream, and downstream sites. Macroinvertebrates were collected via the kicking-bottom method and analyzed using the Shannon–Wiener diversity index and the Average Score Per Taxon (ASPT). Riparian vegetation was surveyed through belt transects and assessed by species distribution and proportional cover. Fourteen macroinvertebrate taxa were identified, dominated by water scavenger beetles and snails. Biodiversity was moderate (H? ? 1.98). ASPT scores declined spatially: upstream (good quality), midstream (moderate), and downstream (poor), indicating worsening water quality downstream. The riparian zone was heavily modified: about 58% grasses, 28% shrubs, and 14% trees, reflecting human disturbance and land-use change. The results reveal progressive ecosystem degradation along the river, strongest downstream, likely driven by pollution and catchment alteration. These results call for integrated catchment management policies, stricter land-use regulation, and community-based riparian restoration programs to enhance water quality, biodiversity, and long-term ecological resilience of the LRC.

Vol. 2 No. 2 (2025)

Article Categories

  • Water resources 14
  • Management in Water sector 6
  • Engineering issues in Water sector 3
  • Irrigation 1
  • Sanitation and Hygiene 1
  • Research and Innovations 1
  • Technical and managerial issues in Water sector 3
  • Institutional development in Water sector 0
  • Financing and economic analysis of water facilities and infrastructure 1
  • National, Regional and International policies in Water sector 1
  • Sustainability of Water and Sanitation Projects 3
  • ICT in Water Management 0

Indexed

JWEMPO is indexed by

Follow Us

Useful Links

Ministry of Water Water Institute Webmail International Maji Scientific Conference

Visitor Counter

108,253
  • Today: 28
  • Yesterday: 104
  • This Month: 2,944
  • This Year: 2,944

Copyright

For the manuscripts recommended for publication, the author(s) will be expected to sign the JWEMPO copyright assignment form. Where necessary the author(s) will need to obtain permission to publish material protected by [...] Read more

© 2026 JWEMPO. All Rights Reserved. Maintained by Water Institute - WI