Rivers are a major source of plastic waste in the oceans. We estimate that 1000 rivers, are accountable for nearly 80% of global annual riverine plastic emissions, which range between 0.8 – 2.7 million metric tons per year, with small urban rivers among
RIVER POLLUTION IN THE CITY OF MUTARE (ZIMBABWE) AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTJemitias Mapira
Google Scholar IPCC. 2014. Climate Change 2014: impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability: Part A[R]. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press: 1132(in Chinese with English abstract). Google Scholar Jiang Lianjie. 2006. Analysis of water pollution in the Yellow River basin and water environment pr...
(v1.1.0)56and usedmaskingto remove homoplastic sites57. Maximum likelihood tree inference was generated using IQ-TREE2(v 2.2.0.3)58and tree rooting, and visualization were done using the toytree package. Heatmaps were generated utilizing known SNPs associated with the Omicron BA.1 and BA.2...
The authors applied a framing approach to a long-standing controversy over the elimination of pollution in the Lower Kishon River basin of northern Israel. Framing was used not only to analyze, map, and evaluate the dispute but also to intervene within the context of a conflict assessment. The...
From studying the water quality indicators of the Yamuna River in the UK, it was found that the main culprits of pollution were industrial waste, agricultural runoff, and domestic sources. By using Principal Component Analysis (PCA), we were able to draw connections between these pollution ...
et al. Development of geo-environmental factors controlled flash flood hazard map for emergency relief operation in complex hydro-geomorphic environment of tropical river, India. Environ Sci Pollut Res 30, 106951–106966 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-022-23441-7 Download citation Received...
2.1River basin management-UK In the UK and other developed countries, river quality, andgroundwater contaminationfrom the point and non-point source pollution have always been the primary concerns (McGonigle et al., 2012). Temperature and hydrology change andbiogeochemical cycles, such ascarbon cyc...
(DCM)37,38. In the recent past, the N input through atmospheric deposition and river runoff has increased due to increasing economic activities27,34. This might lead to an excess of N especially in seawater closest to the source of anthropogenic pollution39,40,41. Hence, coastal seas are ...
Studies are needed to find the causes of these fish kills and to characterize the toxicity risks of pesticide pollution in the RMD. However, there is a lack of knowledge on how to assess and mitigate risks of chemicals in tropical countries: also, many Central American countries do not have...