Dye tracing of the Lusaka karstified aquifer system: implications towards urban groundwater quality protection

Management of groundwater resources requires a large amount of data, coupled with an understanding of the aquifer system behavior. In developing countries, the scarcity in groundwater data has led to aquifers being managed according to rule-of-thumb standards or even abandoned as unmanageable at tim...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental monitoring and assessment 2023-06, Vol.195 (6), p.732-732, Article 732
Hauptverfasser: Simaubi, Mercy, Banda, Kawawa, Levy, Jonathan, Meiman, Joe, Nyambe, Imasiku
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container_title Environmental monitoring and assessment
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creator Simaubi, Mercy
Banda, Kawawa
Levy, Jonathan
Meiman, Joe
Nyambe, Imasiku
description Management of groundwater resources requires a large amount of data, coupled with an understanding of the aquifer system behavior. In developing countries, the scarcity in groundwater data has led to aquifers being managed according to rule-of-thumb standards or even abandoned as unmanageable at times. Groundwater quality protection thus has been through prescribed separation distances often without due regard for internal and boundary characteristics that affect response rates of groundwater movement, attenuation of pollutants, and recharge. In this study, we examine the boundary characteristics of the highly vulnerable karst aquifer system in the rapidly expanding city of Lusaka using a dye tracer technique. We investigate the flow dynamics (magnitude and direction) of groundwater using dye tracer dyes (fluorescein and rhodamine) spiked in pit latrines and observed at discharge springs. The results provide irrefutable evidence that pit latrines are a source and a pathway to contamination of groundwater. Dye tracer movement in groundwater was rapid, estimated at 340 and 430 m/day for fluorescein and rhodamine, respectively, through interconnected conduit density. The vadose zone (epikarst) tends to store diffuse recharge before release to the phreatic zone. These rapid groundwater movements render regulatory separation minimum distances of 30 m between abstraction wells and pit latrines/septic tanks in such environments to be an ineffective means of reducing contamination. The policy focus in the protection of groundwater quality should henceforth be on robust sanitation solutions especially for low-income communities that recognize the socio-economic diversity.
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subjects Aquifer systems
Aquifers
Atmospheric Protection/Air Quality Control/Air Pollution
Coloring Agents
Contamination
Developing countries
Dyes
Earth and Environmental Science
Ecology
Ecotoxicology
Environment
Environmental Management
Environmental Monitoring
Environmental science
Fluorescein
Groundwater
Groundwater data
Groundwater flow
Groundwater pollution
Groundwater quality
Groundwater resources
Hydrologic data
Karst
Latrines
LDCs
Low income areas
Monitoring/Environmental Analysis
Protection
Recharge
Rhodamine
Rhodamines
Sanitation
Separation
Septic tanks
Socioeconomic aspects
Tanks
Tracer techniques
Tracers
Vadose water
Water quality
Water resources
Water springs
Zambia
title Dye tracing of the Lusaka karstified aquifer system: implications towards urban groundwater quality protection
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