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Regular Articles

The effects of population growth on the groundwater quality of a sandy rural catchment

, &
Pages 243-253 | Published online: 13 Nov 2018
 

Abstract

Maputaland is a natural environment situated along the northeast coast of South Africa. Within this area a small section of about 8000 ha was studied with respect to the quality of water from incoming rainfall, the groundwater, the streams and lakes to the outflow through the small Mgobezeleni Estuary. The study area is a representative sample of the Maputaland Coastal Plain that runs from the Lake St Lucia World Heritage site to the Mozambican border. All the water in the area emanates from rainfall with no rivers flowing into the area. Projects initiated from the 1960s by the government in order to improve the welfare of the local population have resulted in a large influx of people, both residents and tourists. The population in the catchment is made up of a relatively small local population that has risen from almost zero in 1970 to about 15 000 in 2015. There is a large annual visiting population of up to 250 000 that is economically valuable to the small resident population. The result is that accommodation facilities have increased together with the necessary infrastructure of water supplies and sewage facilities. The groundwater quality indicates that the sewage facilities are impacting the nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations but that these levels are not present in the lakes into which the groundwater flows. The presence of large amounts of fringing macrophytes in one lake and a high density of cyanophyte microalgae (or cyanobacteria) in the other indicates that sewage pollution is the cause. However, the lakes appear to be removing much of the sewage pollution because the estuary water below the lakes has a high quality. These data suggest that similar pollution might adversely affect other areas of Maputaland, which have a growing tourist population attracted to the Maputaland game parks.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Ms Anneke Botha of the Finance Department, Nelson Mandela University made easy work of all the complicated finance. Mr W. Clark, borehole drill rig operator, Mbazwana was critical in enabling us to find operating boreholes and who kindly took us to numerous borehole sites that we would otherwise not have known existed. Ms Sue Van Rensburg of the South African Environmental Observation Node, with Ms Monique Nunes, greatly assisted the project by collecting lake and estuary samples. Ms Mary Basson (Pieterse) (Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife) assisted us on numerous occasions to gain access to relatively inaccessible sample points. iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority is thanked for permission to work in the Park and Mr Brian Rawlins (UNIZULU) is thanked for assistance with details relating to the availability of the Honours students from the University of Zululand who undertook much of the house-to-house water sampling duties. The students of the UNIZULU Honours classes of 2013, 2014, 2015 are thanked for the enthusiastic manner in which they went about collecting water samples. Mr German Makwela (UNIZULU) is thanked for providing general assistance during the period 2013–2016.

DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

The study reported here is part of work undertaken during 2013–2015 on a project funded by the Water Research Commission of South Africa (Project K5/2259; Bate et al., Citation2016).

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