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Water quality and water-use conflicts in Lake Taabo (Ivory Coast)
Author(s) -
Noël Groga,
Allassane Ouattara,
Sébastino Da Costa,
A. Dauta,
Olivier Beauchard,
Jacques Moreau,
G. Gourène,
Pascal Laffaille
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
open journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2162-1985
pISSN - 2162-1993
DOI - 10.4236/oje.2012.21005
Subject(s) - eutrophication , water quality , environmental science , wastewater , agriculture , nutrient , hydrology (agriculture) , context (archaeology) , water resources , water resource management , leaching (pedology) , environmental engineering , geography , ecology , soil water , geotechnical engineering , archaeology , soil science , engineering , biology
International audienceThe Lake Taabo (Ivory Coast, Africa) results of the construction of the Taabo dam on the Ban- dama River. The changes in the water level of the 69-km² lake depend on 1) the rainfall linked to alternating dry/wet seasons; 2) the extraction of water for human uses; 3) the discharge of water from the upstream dam and the volumes tur- bined by the Kossou dam; 4) the various an- thropic effects (discharge of untreated waste water from towns and industries, and leaching from agricultural land). The average concentra- tions of nutrients (NH4-N: 1.1 mg/L, NO3-N: 1.62 mg/L, PO4-P: 10 mg/L, SiO2: 15 mg/L) and chlo- rophyll a (from 4.8 to 16.5 μg/L, average 11.4 μg/L) indicates some degree of eutrophication. The cumulated effects that threaten the ecosys- tem (degradation of water quality and eutrophi- cation) are such that they are likely to interfere with various water uses. In a context of growing health and environmental concerns in Africa, this study demonstrates conflicts between dif- ferent uses of this water resource and the urgent need for an appropriate policy including specific monitoring of lake water quality, wastewater control, and a programme to reduce agricultural fertilizers

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