| Literature DB >> 34304059 |
R S Robin1, R Purvaja1, D Ganguly1, G Hariharan1, A Paneerselvam1, R T Sundari1, R Karthik1, C S Neethu1, C Saravanakumar1, P Semanti1, M H K Prasad1, M Mugilarasan1, S Rohan1, K Arumugam1, V D Samuel1, R Ramesh2.
Abstract
Anthropogenic activities experienced a pause due to the nationwide lockdown, imposed to contain the rapid spread of COVID-19 in the third week of March 2020. The impacts of suspension of industrial activities, vehicular transport and other businesses for three months (25 March-30 June) on the environmental settings of Chennai, a coastal megacity was assessed. A significant reduction in the key urban air pollutants [PM2.5 (66.5%), PM10 (39.5%), NO2 (94.1%), CO (29%), O3 (45.3%)] was recorded as an immediate consequence of the reduced anthropogenic activities. Comparison of water quality of an urban river Adyar, between pre-lockdown and lockdown, showed a substantial drop in the dissolved inorganic N (47%) and suspended particulate matter (41%) during the latter period. During the pandemic, biomedical wastes in India showed an overall surge of 17%, which were predominantly plastic. FTIR-ATR analysis confirmed the polymers such as polypropylene (25.4%) and polyester (15.4%) in the personal protective equipment.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollutants; Blue economy; COVID-19 lockdown; India; Marine ecosystem; Plastic waste
Year: 2021 PMID: 34304059 DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Pollut Bull ISSN: 0025-326X Impact factor: 5.553