| Literature DB >> 33758592 |
P R Muduli1, A Kumar2, V V Kanuri3, D R Mishra2, P Acharya1, R Saha3, M K Biswas3, A K Vidyarthi4, A Sudhakar4.
Abstract
Ganges River water quality was assessed to record the changes due to the nation-wide pandemic lockdown. Satellite-based (Sentinel-2) water quality analysis before and during lockdown was performed for seven selected locations spread across the entire stretch of the Ganges (Rishikesh-Dimond Harbour). Results revealed that due to the lockdown, the water quality of the Ganges improved with reference to specific water quality parameters, but the improvements were region specific. Along the entire stretch of Ganges, only the Haridwar site showed improvement to an extent of being potable as per the threshold set by the Central Pollution Control Board, New Delhi, India. A 55% decline in turbidity at that site during the lockdown was attributed to the abrupt halt in pilgrimage activities. Absorption by chromophoric dissolved organic matter which is an indicator of organic pollution declined all along the Ganges stretch with a maximum decline at the downstream location of Diamond Harbour. Restricted discharge of industrial effluent, urban pollution, sewage from hotels, lodges, and spiritual dwellings along the Ganges are some of the reasons behind such declines. No significant change in the geographic trend of chlorophyll-a was observed. The findings of this study highlight the importance of regular monitoring of the changes in the Ganges water quality using Sentinel-2 data to further isolate the anthropogenic impact, as India continues the phase-wise opening amidst the pandemic. © Islamic Azad University (IAU) 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropogenic effect; Chlorophyll-a; Chromophoric dissolved organic matter; Sentinel-2; Total suspended matter; Tropical River
Year: 2021 PMID: 33758592 PMCID: PMC7970803 DOI: 10.1007/s13762-021-03245-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Sci Technol (Tehran) ISSN: 1735-1472 Impact factor: 2.860
Fig. 1Seven selected locations along the Ganges stretch a Rishikesh, b Haridwar, c Kanpur, d Varanasi, e Bakhtiarpur, f Garden Reach, and g Diamond Harbour
Sentinel 2-MSI images used in creating monthly composite products (pre-lockdown and post-lockdown) for each study site
| S. No. | Study site | Satellite image dates | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-lockdown (Mar. of 2020) | During lockdown (Apr.–May of 2020) | ||
| 1 | Rishikesh | 10th, 20th and 25th of March 2020 | 4th, 19th and 24th of April 2020 |
| 2 | Haridwar | 10th, 15th, 20th and 30th of March 2020 | 4th, 19th and 24th of April 2020 |
| 3 | Kanpur | 2nd, 9th,19th and 29th of March 2020 | 3rd and 8th of April and 8th of May 2020 |
| 4 | Varanasi | 6th and 31st of March 2020 | 5th and 10th of April and 5th of May 2020 |
| 5 | Bakhtiarpur | 18th and 23rd March 2020 | 2nd, 12th and 17th of April and 17th of May 2020 |
| 6 | Garden reach | 5th, 10th, 15th, 20th and 30th of March 2020 | 14th of April 2020 |
| 7 | Diamond Harbour | 15th and 30th of March 2020 | 19th, 29th of April and 9th of May 2020 |
Fig. 2Sentinel 2-MSI spatial distribution maps of a TSM, b Chl-a, and c aCDOM at seven locations along the Ganges stretches
Fig. 3Variations in water quality parameters a TSM, b Chl-a, c aCDOM along the Ganges stretches. A secondary axis was used to show TSM of Diamond Harbour. The error bars represent standard deviation (± 1σ) from mean)