Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir

Heavy metals are present in low concentrations in reservoirs, but seasonal anthropogenic activities usually elevate the concentrations to a level that could become a health hazard. The dry season concentrations of cadmium, copper, iron, lead, mercury, nickel and zinc were assessed from three sites f...

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Main Authors: Mustapha Moshood Keke, Ewulum Joy Chinenye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Ekológia (Bratislava)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0008
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spelling doaj-60268da401054161bdb4905773a7ba582021-09-05T20:44:47ZengSciendoEkológia (Bratislava)1337-947X2016-06-0135210311310.1515/eko-2016-0008eko-2016-0008Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoirMustapha Moshood Keke0Ewulum Joy Chinenye1Department of Zoology, University of Ilorin, PMB 1515, Ilorin, 240003, NigeriaDepartment of Zoology, University of Ilorin, PMB 1515, Ilorin, 240003, NigeriaHeavy metals are present in low concentrations in reservoirs, but seasonal anthropogenic activities usually elevate the concentrations to a level that could become a health hazard. The dry season concentrations of cadmium, copper, iron, lead, mercury, nickel and zinc were assessed from three sites for 12 weeks in Oyun reservoir, Offa, Nigeria. Triplicate surface water samples were collected and analysed using atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The trend in the level of concentrations in the three sites is site C > B > A, while the trend in the levels of the concentrations in the reservoir is Ni > Fe > Zn > Pb > Cd > Cu > Hg. Ni, Cd, Pb and Hg were found to be higher than the WHO guidelines for the metals in drinking water. The high concentration of these metals was from anthropogenic watershed run-off of industrial effluents, domestic sewages and agricultural materials into the reservoir coming from several human activities such as washing, bathing, fish smoking, especially in site C. The health effects of high concentration of these metals in the reservoir were highlighted. Methods for the treatment and removal of the heavy metals from the reservoir during water purification such as active carbon adsorption, coagulation-flocculation, oxidation-filtration, softening treatment and reverse osmosis process were highlighted. Other methods that could be used include phytoremediation, rhizofiltration, bisorption and bioremediation. Watershed best management practices (BMP) remains the best solution to reduce the intrusion of the heavy metals from the watershed into the reservoir.https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0008heavy metalsanthropogenichealth hazardtreatmentwatershed
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mustapha Moshood Keke
Ewulum Joy Chinenye
spellingShingle Mustapha Moshood Keke
Ewulum Joy Chinenye
Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
Ekológia (Bratislava)
heavy metals
anthropogenic
health hazard
treatment
watershed
author_facet Mustapha Moshood Keke
Ewulum Joy Chinenye
author_sort Mustapha Moshood Keke
title Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
title_short Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
title_full Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
title_fullStr Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
title_sort seasonal assessment, treatment and removal of heavy metal concentrations in a tropical drinking water reservoir
publisher Sciendo
series Ekológia (Bratislava)
issn 1337-947X
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Heavy metals are present in low concentrations in reservoirs, but seasonal anthropogenic activities usually elevate the concentrations to a level that could become a health hazard. The dry season concentrations of cadmium, copper, iron, lead, mercury, nickel and zinc were assessed from three sites for 12 weeks in Oyun reservoir, Offa, Nigeria. Triplicate surface water samples were collected and analysed using atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The trend in the level of concentrations in the three sites is site C > B > A, while the trend in the levels of the concentrations in the reservoir is Ni > Fe > Zn > Pb > Cd > Cu > Hg. Ni, Cd, Pb and Hg were found to be higher than the WHO guidelines for the metals in drinking water. The high concentration of these metals was from anthropogenic watershed run-off of industrial effluents, domestic sewages and agricultural materials into the reservoir coming from several human activities such as washing, bathing, fish smoking, especially in site C. The health effects of high concentration of these metals in the reservoir were highlighted. Methods for the treatment and removal of the heavy metals from the reservoir during water purification such as active carbon adsorption, coagulation-flocculation, oxidation-filtration, softening treatment and reverse osmosis process were highlighted. Other methods that could be used include phytoremediation, rhizofiltration, bisorption and bioremediation. Watershed best management practices (BMP) remains the best solution to reduce the intrusion of the heavy metals from the watershed into the reservoir.
topic heavy metals
anthropogenic
health hazard
treatment
watershed
url https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0008
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