LONG-TERM IMPACTS OF SEWAGE EFFLUENT DISPOSAL ON A TROPICAL WETLAND

Citation
Pl. Osborne et Rg. Totome, LONG-TERM IMPACTS OF SEWAGE EFFLUENT DISPOSAL ON A TROPICAL WETLAND, Water science and technology, 29(4), 1994, pp. 111-117
Citations number
16
Categorie Soggetti
Water Resources","Environmental Sciences","Engineering, Civil
ISSN journal
02731223
Volume
29
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
111 - 117
Database
ISI
SICI code
0273-1223(1994)29:4<111:LIOSED>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Waigani Lake, near Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, is part of an exten sive wetland dominated by the Laloki and Brown Rivers. The wetland has received sewage effluent from stabilisation ponds for over 25 years. Water quality of the sewage, Waigani Lake and its outflow assessed in 1985 indicated that the wetland was significantly reducing suspended s olid loads and the concentrations of dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus . Aerial photographs of Waigani Lake taken between 1966 and 1991 docum ent the complete loss of submerged and floating-leaved plants and the decline in the extent of the littoral, emergent vegetation. These chan ges are related to sewage effluent disposal and, possibly, alterations in the magnitude of annual water level fluctuations. This study of a tropical wetland to which very large quantities of sewage effluent hav e been added demonstrates that the capacity of wetlands for water puri fication is limited and that further study on tropical wetlands is imp erative before management strategies developed for temperate wetlands are applied directly to them.