Given the extensive indiscriminate usage in the past and limited ongoing use, organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) have been widely reported in the Hooghly riverine environment. Hence, surface riverine sediment samples were collected along the urban and suburban transects of the Hooghly River and OCPs were quantified in gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Mean concentration of HCH, DDT, and endosulfan was 5 ng g, 10 ng g, and 4 ng g respectively. DDT was dominant among all the OCPs and contributed nearly 40% to the total OCPs possibly due to the ongoing use of DDT for vector control programs. Diagnostic ratios suggest recent source of lindane, DDT, and endosulfan. Using OCP concentration from previously published data in surface water during the same time frame, sediment-water partitioning of OCPs was estimated. Excluding α-HCH and γ-HCH in few pockets, majority of the OCPs tend to partition more on to sediment. Comparing the sediment concentration with the sediment quality guideline values, risk on ecological integrities was indicated due to DDT and HCH contamination. Suburban sites indicated higher risk than urban sites according to the calculated sediment quality guideline quotient (SQGQ). A brief review on the approach to pesticidal POP pollution management in India revealed that older management approaches should be replaced with a unique, integrated, and holistic system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-019-06973-3 | DOI Listing |
Environ Monit Assess
June 2023
Sustainability Cluster, University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, Dehradun, 248007, Uttarakhand, India.
The nature and intensity of water pollution determine the effects on aquatic biota and aquatic ecosystem health. The present study aimed at assessing the impact of the degraded physicochemical regime of river Saraswati, a polluted river having a historical legacy, on the parasitic infection and the role of fish parasite as a bioindicator of water quality. Two Water Quality Indices (WQIs) were adopted as useful tools for assessing the overall water quality status of polluted river based on 10 physicochemical parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife (Basel)
March 2023
School of Oceanographic Studies, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 700032, India.
The present study reviewed the carbon-biogeochemistry-related observations concerning CO and CH dynamics in the estuaries adjoining the Indian Sundarbans mangrove ecosystem. The review focused on the partial pressure of CO and CH [CO and CH] and air-water CO and CH fluxes and their physical, biogeochemical, and hydrological drivers. The riverine-freshwater-rich Hooghly estuary has always exhibited higher CO emissions than the marine-water-dominated Sundarbans estuaries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
March 2023
Department of Energy & Environmental Sciences, Chaudhary Devi Lal University, Sirsa, Haryana, India.
Demographic outbursts and increased food demands invoke excessive use of pesticides in the agricultural field for increasing productivity which leads to the relentless decline of riverine health and its tributaries. These tributaries are connected to a plethora of point and non-point sources that transport pollutants including pesticides into the Ganga river's mainstream. Simultaneous climate change and lack of rainfall significantly increase pesticide concentration in the soil and water matrix of the river basin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
October 2022
School of Water Resources, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, West Bengal 721302, India. Electronic address:
Riverine ecosystem management along an urban stretch mostly depends on high-frequent (daily-scale) monitoring of water quality at finer spatial resolutions. However, with the decrease in the number of in-situ monitoring stations owing to their expensive maintenance cost, there is a need to develop the next-generation remote sensing (RS) tools as an alternate approach with better synoptic coverage of river water quality assessment. This study advocates three novel model variants to estimate the total suspended solids (TSS) concentration at daily-scale using the public-domain MODIS and Landsat satellite datasets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
August 2020
School of Oceanographic Studies, Jadavpur University, 188 Raja S. C. Mullick Road, Kolkata, West Bengal, 700032, India.
Urbanized rivers flowing through polluted megacities receive substantial amount of carbon from domestic sewage and industrial effluents which can significantly alter the air-water CO flux rates. In this regard, we quantified the partial pressure of CO in the surface water (pCO(water)), air-water CO fluxes, and associated biogeochemical parameters in the Hooghly River, India, flowing through two of the most polluted cities of the country, Kolkata and Howrah, over a complete annual cycle during spring tidal phase (SP) and neap tidal phase (NP). This urbanized part of Hooghly River was always supersaturated with CO having an annual mean pCO(water) and air-water CO flux of ~ 3800 μatm and ~ 49 mol C m year, respectively.
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