Agriculture drainage affects river water quality
Date
2004-03Author
Ayob, Katimon
Azraai, Kassim
Fadil, Othman
Johan, Sohaili
Zulkifli, Yusop
Normala, Hashim
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The acidic level of the freshwater is a major concern to water treatment plant operators. Extremely acidic freshwater could affect the
operation of the treatment plant in many ways. The cost to neutralisation the water would increase and treatment scheduling would
be more complicated. This paper reports the influence of agricultural drainage on river water quality in Bekok river system in Johor,
Malaysia. The river is the sole source of freshwater supply to two water treatment plants located at the downstream reach of the river.
Three water quality parameters, i.e. pH, Iron and Ammonia-N, were used as an indication parameter. Water samples collected from
16 different river reaches along the 20-km river were analysed. A significant decrease in pH was found near the water intake point,
where most of the drained areas are located. The study also found that in general, the quality of the river water was better during low
flow condition (non-rainy days) compared to high flow (rainy days). Multiple regression analysis showed that pH was significantly
related to Iron and Ammonia contents.
URI
http://iemweb.hormandesign.com/assets/download/Journal03-05-2004.pdfhttp://dspace.unimap.edu.my/123456789/13407
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- IEM Journal [310]