Li LiJulia L. A. KnappAnna LinternG. H. C. NgJulia PerdrialPamela SullivanWei Zhi
River water quality is crucial to ecosystem health and water security, yet its deterioration under climate change is often overlooked in climate risk assessments. Here we review how climate change influences river water quality via persistent, gradual shifts and episodic, intense extreme events. Although distinct in magnitude, intensity and duration, these changes modulate the structure and hydro-biogeochemical processes on land and in rivers, hence reshaping land–river connectivity and the quality of river waters. To advance understanding of and forecasting capabilities for water quality in future climates, it is essential to perceive land and rivers as interconnected systems. It is also vital to prioritize research under climate extremes, where the dynamics of water quality often challenge existing theories and models and call for shifts in conceptual paradigms.
Timothy A. StephensBrian P. Bledsoe
Fangyuan XiongYushun ChenShuanghu ZhangYanxue XuYing LüXiao QuWenqi GaoXinghua WuXin WeiDaniel Dianchen GangLian-Shin Lin
Judson W. HarveyJ. D. Gomez‐VelezN. M. SchmadelDurelle ScottElizabeth W. BoyerRichard B. AlexanderKen EngHeather E. GoldenAlbert J. KettnerChristopher P. KonradRichard B. MooreJ. E. PizzutoGreg SchwarzChris SoulsbyJay Choi
Christopher J. WoltemadeChristopher Woltemade