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Chemistry of the heavily urbanized Bagmati River system in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal: export of organic matter, nutrients, major ions, silica, and metals
Authors:Maya P Bhatt  William H McDowell  Kevin H Gardner  Jens Hartmann
Institution:1. Institute for the Biogeochemistry and Marine Chemistry, Klima Campus: University of Hamburg, Bundesstrasse 55, 20146, Hamburg, Germany
2. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, 03824, USA
3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Environmental Research Group, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, 03824, USA
4. Central Department of Environmental Sciences, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal
Abstract:Water quality in less-developed countries is often subject to substantial degradation, but is rarely studied in a systematic way. The concentration and flux of major ions, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, and trace metals in the heavily urbanized Bagmati River within Kathmandu Valley, Nepal, are reported. The concentrations of all chemical species increased with distance downstream with the exceptions of protons and nitrate, and showed strong relationships with population density adjacent to the river. Total dissolved nitrogen (TDN), dominated by NH4, was found in high concentrations along the Bagmati drainage system. The export of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and TDN were 23 and 33 tons km?2 year?1, respectively, at the outlet point of the Kathmandu Valley, much higher than in relatively undeveloped watersheds. The cationic and silica fluxes were 106 and 18 tons km?2 year?1 at the outlet of the Bagmati within Kathmandu Valley, and 36 and 32 tons km?2 year?1 from the relatively pristine headwater area. The difference between headwaters and the urban site suggests that the apparent weathering flux is three times higher than the actual weathering rate in the heavily urbanized Bagmati basin. Fluxes of cations and silica are above the world average, as well as fluxes from densely populated North American and European watersheds. End-member composition of anthropogenic sources like sewage or agricultural runoff is needed to understand the drivers of this high rate of apparent weathering.
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