Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya

Study region: This study was undertaken in the Athi-Sabaki river basin in Kenya in East Africa. Study focus: The study focused on the determination of the influence of streamflow variability on salt fluxes. This involved monitoring of river discharge and river salinity in the period between 2012 and...

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Main Author: Johnson U. Kitheka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-08-01
Series:Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581819300709
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spelling doaj-03b7d939b28a4bdb81a591164b8b76f72020-11-25T01:09:09ZengElsevierJournal of Hydrology: Regional Studies2214-58182019-08-0124Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in KenyaJohnson U. Kitheka0Department of Hydrology and Aquatic Sciences, School of Environment, Water and Natural Resources, South Eastern Kenya University, P.O Box 170-90200, Kitui, KenyaStudy region: This study was undertaken in the Athi-Sabaki river basin in Kenya in East Africa. Study focus: The study focused on the determination of the influence of streamflow variability on salt fluxes. This involved monitoring of river discharge and river salinity in the period between 2012 and 2018. New hydrological insights: : This study demonstrates that Athi-Sabaki river discharges significant quantity of salt to the sea. There are significant seasonal and inter-annual variations in salt fluxes that are due to variations in river discharge and rainfall in the basin. The relationship between streamflow variations and variations of salinity in the river was inverse with highest salinity concentrations and fluxes occurring during low flow conditions. The river salinity and TDS concentrations decreased with an increase in river discharge due to dilution effect and flushing of salt from the river. The highly polluted sub-basins draining through the City of Nairobi exhibited relatively higher salinity and salt fluxes as compared to non-polluted ones draining rural areas. The total salt flux in the basin ranged between 29 × 103 and 261 × 103 tons year−1. The relatively high salinity and salt fluxes were attributed to the discharge of wastewaters, seepage of groundwater and irrigation return flows. The study calls for water pollution control, sustainable irrigation and landuse practices in the basin. Keywords: Athi-Sabaki river, Streamflow variations, Salinity variations, Water pollution, Salt fluxes, Kenyahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581819300709
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johnson U. Kitheka
spellingShingle Johnson U. Kitheka
Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
author_facet Johnson U. Kitheka
author_sort Johnson U. Kitheka
title Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
title_short Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
title_full Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
title_fullStr Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: The case study of the Athi river in Kenya
title_sort salinity and salt fluxes in a polluted tropical river: the case study of the athi river in kenya
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
issn 2214-5818
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Study region: This study was undertaken in the Athi-Sabaki river basin in Kenya in East Africa. Study focus: The study focused on the determination of the influence of streamflow variability on salt fluxes. This involved monitoring of river discharge and river salinity in the period between 2012 and 2018. New hydrological insights: : This study demonstrates that Athi-Sabaki river discharges significant quantity of salt to the sea. There are significant seasonal and inter-annual variations in salt fluxes that are due to variations in river discharge and rainfall in the basin. The relationship between streamflow variations and variations of salinity in the river was inverse with highest salinity concentrations and fluxes occurring during low flow conditions. The river salinity and TDS concentrations decreased with an increase in river discharge due to dilution effect and flushing of salt from the river. The highly polluted sub-basins draining through the City of Nairobi exhibited relatively higher salinity and salt fluxes as compared to non-polluted ones draining rural areas. The total salt flux in the basin ranged between 29 × 103 and 261 × 103 tons year−1. The relatively high salinity and salt fluxes were attributed to the discharge of wastewaters, seepage of groundwater and irrigation return flows. The study calls for water pollution control, sustainable irrigation and landuse practices in the basin. Keywords: Athi-Sabaki river, Streamflow variations, Salinity variations, Water pollution, Salt fluxes, Kenya
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581819300709
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