Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://rda.sliit.lk/handle/123456789/960
Title: Assessment of pollution sources, fate of pollutants, and potential instream interventions to mitigate pollution of earthen canals of urban to rural-urban fringe
Authors: Gomes, P. I. A
Fernando, B. A. V. W
Dehini, G. K
Keywords: Advection
Assimilation
Grey water footprint
Molecular diffusion
Spatiotemporal water quality variations
Urban canals
Issue Date: Nov-2019
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Citation: Gomes, P.I.A., Fernando, B.A.V.W. & Dehini, G.K. Assessment of Pollution Sources, Fate of Pollutants, and Potential Instream Interventions to Mitigate Pollution of Earthen Canals of Urban to Rural-Urban Fringe. Water Air Soil Pollut 230, 262 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-019-4314-7
Series/Report no.: Water, Air, & Soil Pollution;Vol 230 Issue 11 Pages 1-15
Abstract: Three representative earthen canals from urban, peri-urban, and rural-urban fringe of Sri Lanka were studied for a 2-year period against different seasons to capture insights important in ecological rehabilitation. Only the canal from rural-urban fringe showed a better water quality in wet season; elucidating, the impact of contaminated catchment runoff in the other canals. At a given sampling session, one or two peaks (relative maxima) were observed in urban and peri-urban canals for pollution representative parameters such as nitrate nitrogen and soluble reactive phosphorus. Those peaks were highly localised, an indication of poor advection. In general, two-dimensional variations of electrical conductivity and turbidity in dry season were uniform in urban and peri-urban canals, an indication of dominant molecular diffusion. This was further evidenced via physical models for different flow stages (low, high, and bankfull). Therefore, fate of contaminants had to be mainly governed by assimilation via sediments. However, grey water footprint analyses showed urban and peri-urban canals have over utilised the natural assimilation capacity of many water quality parameters by several folds. This study proved the importance of inducing attenuation by instream physical heterogeneity similar to natural streams or naturalised canals such as the canal from the rural-urban fringe of this study.
URI: http://rda.sliit.lk/handle/123456789/960
ISSN: 1567-7230
Appears in Collections:Department of Civil Engineering -Scopes
Research Papers - Open Access Research
Research Papers - SLIIT Staff Publications

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