Impact on water quality of land uses along Thamalakane-Boteti River: An outlet of the Okavango Delta

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Publication Details

Author list: Masamba WRL, Mazvimavi D

Publisher: Elsevier

Place: OXFORD

Publication year: 2008

Journal: Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C (1474-7065)

Journal acronym: PHYS CHEM EARTH

Volume number: 33

Issue number: 8-13

Start page: 687

End page: 694

Number of pages: 8

ISSN: 1474-7065

Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Botswana is a serniarid country and yet has one of the world's famous wetlands: the Okavango Delta. The Thamalakane-Boteti River is one of the Delta's Outlets. The water quality of the Thamalakane-Boteti River was determined and related to its utilisation. The major land uses along the Thamalakane River within Maun are residential areas, lodges. hotels, and grazing by cattle and donkeys. The water is used as a source of water for livestock, wildlife in a game park, horticulture and domestic applications including drinking. The river is also used for fishing.To check whether these activities negatively impact on the water quality, pH, electrical conductivity, dissolved oxygen, temperature. total dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus, Faecal coliforms and Faecal streptococci and selected metals were determined from July 2005 to January 2006. The pH was near neutral except for the southern most sampling sites where values of up to 10.3 were determined. Dissolved oxygen varied from 2 mg/l to 8 mg/l. Sodium (range 0.6-3.2 mg/l), K (0.3-3.6 mg/l), Fe (1.6-6.9 mg/l) conductivity (56-430 mu S/cm) and Mg (0.2-6.7 mg/l) increased with increased distance from the Delta, whereas lead showed a slight decline. Total dissolved phosphorus was low (up to 0.02 mg/l) whereas total dissolved nitrogen was in the range 0.08-1.5 mg/l. Faecal coliform (range 0-48 CFU/100ml) and Faecal streptococci (40-260CFU/100 ml) were low for open waters with multiple uses. The results indicate that there is possibility of pollution with organic matter and nitrogen. It is recommended that more monitoring of water quality needs to be done and the sources of pollution identified. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Keywords

coliforms, land use, Okavango, water quality


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Last updated on 2021-07-05 at 03:55