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Streams, sewage, and shallow groundwater : stream-aquifer interactions in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal

Prajapati, Rajaram ; Overkamp, Nick N. ; Moesker, Niek ; Happee, Kate ; van Bentem, Rick ; Danegulu, Anusha ; Manandhar, Bikesh ; Devkota, Nischal LU ; Thapa, Amber Bahadur and Upadhyay, Surabhi , et al. (2021) In Sustainable Water Resources Management 7(5).
Abstract

The Kathmandu Valley in Nepal is facing a water quantity and quality crisis due to rapid urbanization and haphazard water and wastewater planning and management. Annually, groundwater extractions in the Kathmandu Valley exceed capture, resulting in groundwater table declines. Streams are often important sources of recharge to (or destination of discharges from) aquifers. However, stream-aquifer interactions in the Kathmandu Valley are poorly understood. To improve this understanding, we performed topographic surveys of water levels, and measured water quality, in streams and adjacent hand-dug wells (shallow aquifer). In pre-monsoon, 12% (2018) and 44% (2019) of wells had water levels higher than adjacent streams, indicating mostly a... (More)

The Kathmandu Valley in Nepal is facing a water quantity and quality crisis due to rapid urbanization and haphazard water and wastewater planning and management. Annually, groundwater extractions in the Kathmandu Valley exceed capture, resulting in groundwater table declines. Streams are often important sources of recharge to (or destination of discharges from) aquifers. However, stream-aquifer interactions in the Kathmandu Valley are poorly understood. To improve this understanding, we performed topographic surveys of water levels, and measured water quality, in streams and adjacent hand-dug wells (shallow aquifer). In pre-monsoon, 12% (2018) and 44% (2019) of wells had water levels higher than adjacent streams, indicating mostly a loss of stream water to the aquifer. However, in post-monsoon, 69% (2018) and 70% (2019) of wells had water levels higher than adjacent streams, indicating that monsoon rainfall contributes to shallow aquifer recharge which, at least temporarily, causes streams to transition from losing to gaining. Concentrations of all water quality parameters (electrical conductivity, ammonia, alkalinity, and hardness) were higher in the pre-monsoon compared to post-monsoon in both streams and wells. There was no recurring trend in water level difference longitudinally from upstream to downstream. However, water quality in streams and wells depleted from upstream to downstream. While we clearly observed seasonal refilling of the shallow aquifer, the role of the deep aquifer in seasonal storage processes deserve future research attention.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Groundwater, Kathmandu Valley, Stream-aquifer interactions, Water management, Water quality
in
Sustainable Water Resources Management
volume
7
issue
5
article number
72
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • scopus:85112624591
ISSN
2363-5037
DOI
10.1007/s40899-021-00542-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
55698102-a0bf-4d37-8c70-dc82b3f8847d
date added to LUP
2021-09-08 13:09:44
date last changed
2022-04-27 03:47:50
@article{55698102-a0bf-4d37-8c70-dc82b3f8847d,
  abstract     = {{<p>The Kathmandu Valley in Nepal is facing a water quantity and quality crisis due to rapid urbanization and haphazard water and wastewater planning and management. Annually, groundwater extractions in the Kathmandu Valley exceed capture, resulting in groundwater table declines. Streams are often important sources of recharge to (or destination of discharges from) aquifers. However, stream-aquifer interactions in the Kathmandu Valley are poorly understood. To improve this understanding, we performed topographic surveys of water levels, and measured water quality, in streams and adjacent hand-dug wells (shallow aquifer). In pre-monsoon, 12% (2018) and 44% (2019) of wells had water levels higher than adjacent streams, indicating mostly a loss of stream water to the aquifer. However, in post-monsoon, 69% (2018) and 70% (2019) of wells had water levels higher than adjacent streams, indicating that monsoon rainfall contributes to shallow aquifer recharge which, at least temporarily, causes streams to transition from losing to gaining. Concentrations of all water quality parameters (electrical conductivity, ammonia, alkalinity, and hardness) were higher in the pre-monsoon compared to post-monsoon in both streams and wells. There was no recurring trend in water level difference longitudinally from upstream to downstream. However, water quality in streams and wells depleted from upstream to downstream. While we clearly observed seasonal refilling of the shallow aquifer, the role of the deep aquifer in seasonal storage processes deserve future research attention.</p>}},
  author       = {{Prajapati, Rajaram and Overkamp, Nick N. and Moesker, Niek and Happee, Kate and van Bentem, Rick and Danegulu, Anusha and Manandhar, Bikesh and Devkota, Nischal and Thapa, Amber Bahadur and Upadhyay, Surabhi and Talchabhadel, Rocky and Thapa, Bhesh Raj and Malla, Rabin and Pandey, Vishnu Prasad and Davids, Jeffrey C.}},
  issn         = {{2363-5037}},
  keywords     = {{Groundwater; Kathmandu Valley; Stream-aquifer interactions; Water management; Water quality}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{5}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Sustainable Water Resources Management}},
  title        = {{Streams, sewage, and shallow groundwater : stream-aquifer interactions in the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40899-021-00542-8}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s40899-021-00542-8}},
  volume       = {{7}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}