On-site sanitation density and groundwater quality: evidence from remote sensing and in situ observations in the Thiaroye aquifer, Senegal

Author:

Diaw Mor Talla1,Cissé-Faye Seynabou1,Gaye Cheikh Becaye1,Niang Seydou2,Pouye Abdoulaye1,Campos Luiza C.3,Taylor Richard G.4

Affiliation:

1. Geology Department, Faculty of Sciences and Techniques, Cheikh Anta DIOP University, Dakar, B.P. 5005, Dakar-Fann, Senegal

2. Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire, Cheikh Anta DIOP University, Dakar, B.P. 5005, Dakar-Fann, Senegal

3. Department of Civil, Environmental & Geomatic Engineering, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK

4. Department of Geography, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK

Abstract

Abstract In rapidly urbanising low-income towns and cities, there remains an absence of scientific evidence and regulatory structures to sustain the quality and quantity of groundwater used for low-cost water supplies and to reconcile this with continued use of the subsurface for low-cost sanitation. Here, we analyse the relationship between the density of on-site sanitation and shallow groundwater quality in the Thiaroye aquifer of Quaternary sands in Dakar, Senegal. On-site sanitation was mapped using object-oriented classification and visual interpretation of high-resolution, optical satellite images and ground-truthing surveys. Groundwater quality was assessed over a three-year period (2017–2019) from a network of 61 sources comprising boreholes, dug-wells, hand tubewells and piezometers. More than 253,000 on-site sanitation facilities are identified over an area of 520 km2 with densities ranging from 1 to 70 per hectare. A moderate, statistically significant linear relationship (r2 = 0.55, p « 0.01) is found between the density of on-site sanitation facilities and nitrate concentrations in sampled groundwater sources. Groundwater contamination beyond the WHO drinking-water guideline value (50 mg/L) occurs where densities of on-site sanitation facilities exceed 4 (±4) per hectare, a threshold commonly surpassed in peri-urban areas underlain by the Thiaroye aquifer of Dakar.

Funder

Royal Society Africa Capacity Building Initiative and the UK Department for International Development

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pollution,Waste Management and Disposal,Water Science and Technology,Development

Reference45 articles.

1. ANSD 2016 National Census of the Population of Senegal in 2016. Excel sheet 843 rows and 25 columns. National Agency for Statistics and Demography, Dakar, Senegal.

2. ARGOSS 2001 Guidelines for Assessing Risk to Groundwater From On-Site Sanitation. British Geological Survey Commissioned Report CR/01/142, p. 97.

3. Buss S. R. Rivett M. O. Bemment C. D. 2005 Attenuation of Nitrate in the Subsurface Environment. Technical Report, 99 pages. Environment Agency Rio House Waterside Drive, Aztec West Almondsbury, Bristol, BS32 4UD.

4. Risk assessment of rising groundwater level in the Thiaroye suburb zone (Dakar, Senegal),2001

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