Affiliation:
1. Institute of Environmental and Water Resources Management (IPASA) Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Skudai, 81310, Johor, Malaysia
2. Faculty of Engineering, Kolej Universiti Teknologi Tun Hussein Onn, 86400 Parit Raja, Batu Pahat, Johor, Malaysia
Abstract
Runoff quality draining from 17.14km2 urban catchment in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, was analysed. The land-use consists of residential (30.3%), agricultural (27.3%), open space (27.9%), industrial (8.1%) and commercial (6.4%) areas. Three storm events were sampled in detail. These storms produced stormflow between 0.84mm and 27.82mm, and peakflow from 2.19m3/s to 42.36m3/s. Water quality showed marked variation during storms especially for TSS, BOD and COD with maximum concentrations of 778mg/l, 135mg/l and 358mg/l, respectively. Concentrations of TOC, DOC, NH3-N, Fe and level of colour were also high. In general, the river quality is badly polluted and falls in Class V based on the Malaysian Interim National Water Quality Standards. Event Mean Concentrations (EMC) for various parameters varied considerably between storms. The largest storm produced higher EMC for TSS, NO3-N and SS whereas the smaller storms tend to register higher EMC for BOD, COD, NH3-N, TOC, Ca, K, Mg, Fe and Zn. Such variations could be explained in terms of pollutant availability and the effects of flushing and dilution. Based on a three-month average recurrence interval (ARI) of rainfall, the estimated event loadings (ton/ha) of TSS, BOD, COD, TOC, NH3-N and NO3-N were 0.055, 0.016, 0.012, 0.039, 0.010, 0.0007 and 0.0002, respectively. Heavy metals present in trace quantities. Storms with 3 months ARI could capture about 70% of the total annual loads of major pollutants.
Subject
Water Science and Technology,Environmental Engineering