B. Gopal et M. Sah, CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT OF RIVERS IN INDIA - CASE-STUDY OF THE RIVER YAMUNA, Environmental conservation, 20(3), 1993, pp. 243-254
The River Yamuna, originating in the Himalayas, is the largest tributa
ry of the River Ganga (Ganges) into which it flows at Allahabad. Its d
rainage basin covers about 42% of the Ganga River basin and about 11%
of India's total land area. The area of the Yamuna drainage basin is d
ensely populated and under intensive agriculture, while industrial act
ivity is also rapidly growing in it. Climatically, a large part of the
basin is semi-arid, and the river-flow depends upon highly erratic mo
nsoonal rains. Therefore, the River and its tributaries have been regu
lated for over a century by dams and barrages for domestic water-suppl
y and irrigation. Besides increased flow-regulation, the River's syste
m has been under increasing anthropogenic stress from discharge of - m
ostly untreated - domestic and industrial wastewaters, and from other
activities in the basin. River Yamuna is severely polluted by domestic
and industrial effluents especially from Delhi down to Agra. Water ex
traction and consequently low flow has affected the self-purification
capacity of the River. The greater inflow of River Chambal helps River
Yamuna to recover to some extent after their confluence near Etawah.
Studies of water quality and biota of the River Yamuna along its cours
e during the past 30 years show rapid deterioration of water-quality,
loss of fisheries, and significant changes in the biotic communities.
In the manner of River Yamuna, its tributaries have also become increa
singly polluted during the same period. There has, however. been littl
e attention paid to the management of the River system and conservatio
n of its resources, except for some efforts at the treatment of sewage
effluents but emphasizing only water-quality. Ignoring the river-floo
d-plain interactions which play significant roles in the ecology of a
river, most of the floodplain has been reclaimed by constructing high
levees. We emphasize that the Yamuna River basin should be treated as
one ecocomplex in developing appropriate management strategies, and th
at the conservation of water-quality and biota can be achieved through
protection and better management of floodplains than has been practis
ed to date.