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Land Use and Water Quality: The impacts of diffuse pollution (Paperback)
Loot Price: R3,111
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Land Use and Water Quality: The impacts of diffuse pollution (Paperback)
Series: Scientific and Technical Report Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The influence of landscapes - topography, soil, vegetation, geology
- on water quality is an inherent part of the global water cycle.
Land use has adverse impacts for example when soils are exposed,
significant quantities of pollutants are released (including
anthropogenic materials added to those naturally present), or
pollutants are added directly to the water environment. Those
impacts range from industrial development to farming and
urbanisation. Whilst inefficient polluting industrial effluents are
still tolerated in some countries, and poorly treated sewage
globally remains a huge challenge for sanitation and public health,
as well as the water environment, diffuse pollution is relatively
poorly recognised or understood. The operator of a sewage or trade
effluent treatment plant is consciously discharging effluent to the
local river. But a farmer is simply growing crops or farming
livestock, a city commuter driving to work is unlikely to be
thinking how brake pad wear has released copper to the water (and
air) environment and hydrocarbons and particulates too; no one is
intending to cause pollution of the water environment. The same
applies to industrial chemists creating fire-proofing chemicals,
solvents, fertilisers, pesticides, cosmetics and many more
substances which contaminate the environment. Understanding and
ultimately minimising diffuse pollution is in that sense the
science of unintended consequences. And the consequences can be
severe, for water resources and ecosystems. It's a global problem.
This book comprises 18 papers from experts around the globe,
presenting evidence from tropical as well as temperate regions, and
rural as well as urban land use challenges. The book explores the
nature of diffuse pollution and exemplifies the issues at various
scales, from high-level national overviews to particular catchment
and pollutant issues. By contrast, natural or semi-natural forest
cover has long been recognised as safeguarding water quality in
reservoirs (examples from Australia to Thailand and UK). The final
chapter looks at how landscapes generally, can be designed to
minimise pollution risks from particular land-uses, arguing for a
more widespread catchment approach to water-aware landscape design,
allied with flood risk resilience, place-making for people, and
biodiversity opportunities too.
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