MODELLING EFFLUENT ASSIMILATIVE CAPACITY OF IKPOBA RIVER, BENIN CITY, NIGERIA
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4314/njt.341.902Keywords:
Assimilative capacity, Fair ratio, untreated waste, pathological condition, maximum allowable BOD loadAbstract
The sheer display of reprehensible propensity on the part of public hospitals, abattoirs, breweries and city dwellers at large to discharge untreated waste, debris, scum and, in particular, municipal and industrial effluents into Ikpoba River has morphed into a situation whereby the assimilative capacity of the river has reached a record level. The seeming quietism and clinical posture of the relevant Environmental Agency to this pathological condition is sickening and in any case seen as remiss on their part. This paper seeks to determine the assimilative capacity of the river with a view to articulating policy-proposal stream in the instance that its value is unsafe for ichthyofaunal beings and humans. A combination of basic Streeter-Phelp equation and monograph of Fair et al. were used for the determination of the assimilative capacity and the maximum allowable biological oxygen demand (BOD) load discharged into the river from three identified point sources of wastewater and for three different seasons in Nigeria (i.e. rainy, dry and harmattan seasons). Results indicate that in all the segments studied, the Fair ratio (self-purification factor) is less than unity, indicating the predominance of deoxygenation rate over reaeration rate. Reaeration rate ranges over all real values from 0.641day-1to 0.693day-1, while deoxygenation rate ranges between 0.718 day-1 and 0.839 day-1; a condition which indicates a poor assimilative capacity potential. Moreover, a higher assimilative capacity was obtained for rainy season for all the segments studied, with sampling point 3 (Guinness-harmattan and dry season) showing an overall worse assimilative capacity and poor maximum allowable BOD of 8.1x109, 1.28x1010 and 5.60x109 kg/day respectively. In a way, the determination of the assimilative capacity of Ikpoba River is a landmark in the history of the river pollution. It beggars belief that we live down the harrowing pathological condition of the river without recognizing its wider implications.
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