4.5 Article

Inter-estuarine and seasonal to decadal variations of heavy metal pollution in the Gulf of Cambay, India

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-021-09680-0

关键词

Heavy metals; Pollution; Anthropogenic inputs; Seasonal cycling; Indian estuaries; Water conservation

资金

  1. Ministry of Education (MoE), India [INST/EES/2015036]
  2. Department of Science & Technology (DST) [2017/IF/170451]

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This study investigates the metal pollution status in the Gulf of Cambay, a major food hub in India, by analyzing the seasonal abundances of various heavy metals in suspended sediments. The results indicate that the suspended sediments generally exhibit low pollution levels, but there are moderate to high pollution hotspots in certain areas and seasons. The comparison with previous studies suggests that suspended sediments efficiently capture active metal pollution in Indian estuaries. Additionally, there has been a recent decline in estuarine metal pollution, which may be attributed to increased organic matter supplies from urban sewage discharge and the trapping of contaminated riverine sediments upstream of large dam reservoirs.
Toxic heavy metals adsorbed preferentially onto suspended sediments enter our food chain by bio-assimilation in coastal ocean organisms. To decipher metal pollution status in the Gulf of Cambay (food hub of India) under rising anthropogenic pressure, we present seasonal abundances of Ti, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, and Pb in >150 samples of suspended sediments (>0.45 mu m) collected in four seasons (2016-2017) from two large estuaries (Narmada and Tapi). The suspended sediments of both the estuaries generally show low heavy metal pollution (I-geo < 1). The hotspots of moderate-to-high pollution of Pb (I-geo < 4), Cd (I-geo < 3), and Zn (I-geo < 2) are found at salinity <2, and those of Co (I-ge(o) <2) at salinity similar to 20-30 in the Tapi estuary during the nonmonsoon seasons indicating their decoupled sources in Surat. The PLI values show no or little seasonality in the overall metal pollution status of both the estuaries. A comparison with the literature data suggests that suspended sediments efficiently capture active metal pollution in Indian estuaries. Furthermore, a recent decline (2004-2017) in estuarine metal pollution in the Gulf of Cambay found in this study could be due to enhanced organic matter supplies by enhanced urban sewage discharge and/or more trapping of contaminated riverine sediments upstream of the newly built large dam reservoirs counteracting the growth of anthropogenic metal inputs in the Narmada and Tapi watersheds. The data scarcity of heavy metal concentrations in suspended sediments limits reporting unambiguously the current pollution status of other major Indian estuaries.

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