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Investigating the effects of irrigation with indirectly recharged groundwater using recycled water on soil and crops in semi-arid areas.

Authors :
Verma, Kavita
Manisha, Manjari
Shivali, NU
Santrupt, RM
Anirudha, TP
Ramesh, N
Chanakya, HN
Parama, V.R.R
Mohan Kumar, MS
Rao, Lakshminarayana
Source :
Environmental Pollution; Nov2023, Vol. 337, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The utilization of direct wastewater for irrigation poses many environmental problems such as soil quality deterioration due to the accumulation of salts, heavy metals, micro-pollutants, and health risks due to undesirable microorganisms. This hampers its agricultural reuse in arid and semi-arid regions. To address these concerns, the present study introduces a recent approach that involves using indirectly recharged groundwater (GW) with secondary treated municipal wastewater (STW) for irrigation through a Soil Aquifer Treatment-based system (SAT). This method aims to mitigate freshwater scarcity in semi-arid regions. The study assessed GW levels, physicochemical properties, and microbial diversity of GW, and soil in both impacted (receiving recycled water) and non-impacted (not receiving recycled water) areas, before recycling (2015–2018) and after recycling (2019–2022) period of the project. The results indicated a significant increase of 68–70% in GW levels of the studied boreholes in the impacted areas. Additionally, the quality of indirectly recharged GW in the impacted areas improved notably in terms of electrical conductivity (EC), hardness, total dissolved solids (TDS), sodium adsorption ratio (SAR), along with certain cations and anions (hard water to soft water). No significant difference was observed in soil properties and microbial diversity of the impacted areas, except for EC and SAR, which were reduced by 50% and 39%, respectively, after the project commenced. The study also monitored specific microbial species, including total coliforms, Escherichia coli (as indicator organisms), Shigella , and Klebsiella in some of the harvested crops (beetroot, tomato, and spinach). However, none of the analysed crops exhibited the presence of the studied microorganisms. Overall, the study concludes that indirectly recharged GW using STW is a better sustainable and safe irrigation alternative compared to direct wastewater use or extracted hard GW from deep aquifers. [Display omitted] • Need to reduce the burden on global freshwater supplies • Indirectly recharged groundwater is a sustainable and safe alternative for irrigation • Groundwater levels improved by 68–70% with better groundwater quality • No negative impact of indirectly recharged groundwater on soil properties • Crops irrigated with recharged groundwater were safe from tested microbes [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02697491
Volume :
337
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Pollution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173051492
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122516