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Existing challenge to succeed a sustainable built Aqua-environment in misty green Valleys in the Hill country of Sri Lanka; a case study

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dc.contributor.author Shirantha, RRAR
dc.contributor.author Amarathunga, AAD
dc.contributor.author Weerasekara, KAWS
dc.date.accessioned 2013-11-15T13:26:04Z
dc.date.available 2013-11-15T13:26:04Z
dc.date.issued 2013-11-15
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/9191
dc.description.abstract The upper watershed of Dambagastalawa River in Sri Lanka is a precious ecosystem of esthetic beauty that supplies direct drinking, bathing and agricultural water for the people in Pattipola-Ambewela and Agara Pathana areas. Nevertheless, is often subjected to multiple threats due to a range of human related activities. Therefore, a monthly bio monitoring study was carried out in 2007 and 2008 to assess current ecological conditions at five selected sites. The aim was to evaluate future sustainability of the catchments. The invertebrate fauna were collected through in situ direct counting, stone lifting, kick, scope and core sampling methods and evaluation of faunal composition was done preferring to the Biological Monitoring Working Party (BMWP) scoring system. A parallel study was carried out to assess the water quality parameters following the APHA standard methods. Any visible change in the chatchment land use patterns was also monitored. The highest faunal diversity (<10) was recorded at highly oxygenated (<7.33 mg/l) up stream sites with little/or no disturbance in Pattipola forest area where Ephemeropterans and Sumiliids were dominant. The second most diverse site (≤ 7) was at the disturbed Agara Pathana site where Hydrosphychids, Chironomids, Plannarians and Molluscs were dominant. The lowest faunal diversity (≤ 3) was recorded at the Ambewela reservoir which is largely colonized by poor water quality indicative taxa Hydra and Chironomid (~208 individuals/m2). The Average Score Per Taxon (ASPT) of the upstream sties (6.8 and 7) were less comparable with reference stream site (8.2 out of 10) studied at the Piduruthalagala peak. ASPT was 4.57 in the down stream. However, significantly lower ASPT values (3.5 at sluice gate and 2.5 at uppermost outlet) were recorded at Ambewela reservoir evidently showing an associated ecological risk. The reservoir was found to received high levels of nutrients (ammonia 0.20- 0.25 mg/l, nitrite 0.09 -0.121 mg/l, nitrate 0.50 -1.35 mg/l and phosphate 0.050 -.075 mg/l) due to effluent run-off from the adjoined livestock and crop farms. It was found to have a periodic eutrophic condition especially during low rain and growing crop seasons. No biological/chemical evidence to prove self-purification in its down stream in Agara Pathana where the river encounters other additional threats. Converting of forest/tea plantations into annual crops, garbage dumping, loading tea dust/other waste is severe in this area thereby water become more turbid (TSS 459.90 mg/l) unpleasant and undrinkable. Present case study showed the agriculture based human activities in middle catchments of the Dambagastalawa river posed significant negative impacts on river quality. In the long run this might affect the entire aqua-environment in the Ambewela/Agra valleys. Actions should immediately be taken to bring these valleys into manageable levels otherwise we may face irreversible loss of sustainability. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject hill country en_US
dc.subject Dambagastalawa river en_US
dc.subject bio monitoring en_US
dc.subject water pollution en_US
dc.subject ecological risk en_US
dc.title Existing challenge to succeed a sustainable built Aqua-environment in misty green Valleys in the Hill country of Sri Lanka; a case study en_US
dc.type Conference-Full-text en_US
dc.identifier.year 2010 en_US
dc.identifier.conference International Conference on Sustainable Built Environments 2010 en_US
dc.identifier.place Earl's Regency Hotel, Kandy. en_US
dc.identifier.proceeding Sustainable Built Environments en_US
dc.identifier.email r_shirantha@hotmail.com en_US
dc.identifier.email Deeptha@nara.ac.lk en_US
dc.identifier.email shyamalikaww@gmail.com en_US


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