Environmental Management

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    Identification of Macrophyte Indicator Species to Evaluate the Water Quality in Wetland
    (Proceedings of the 22nd International Forestry and Environment Symposium 2017, 2017) Bellanthudawa, B.K.A.; Wijeyaratne, W.M.D.N.
    Present study conducted to assess the SP?ti?! yeri?tion of mecrophvte distribution 2nd water quality parameters of a rehabilitated and non-rehabilitated areas of the Diyawannawa wetland with the aim of identifying suitable macrophyte indicator species for water quality monitonng. Sites A, B and C were located in non-rehabilitated area and the sites D, E and F were located in rehabilitated areas in Diyawannawa wetland. The sampling was conducted from April to October 2016. At each site, water pH, temperature, conductivity, sa!inity, total dissolved solids (TDS), dissolved oxygen concentration (DO), biological oxygen demand (BOD5), chemical oxygen demand (COD), depth, visibility, total nitrate (TN), chlorophyli a (Chl a) and total phosphorus (TP) concentration were measured and the percentage cover of macrophytes were recorded. The correlation of percentage cover of macrophyte species to the water quality parameters were assessed using Pemson's correlation analysis. Principal component Analysis (PCA) based on the percentage cover of macrophyte species was performed to identify the characteristic species at each site. M[NITAB 14 software was used for statistical analysis ofdata. The percentage cover of Hydril/a verticil/ata, Pistia straiiotes and Cypreus iria did not show significant spatial variations among rehabilitated and non-rehabilitated areas. Significantly high percentage cover of Nymphaea ampla (64%) and Annona glabra (l I %) were recorded in site A in non-rehabilitated area. Eichhornia crassipes (22%) showed significantly high percentage cover in site B in non- rehabilitated area and site E in rehabilitated area. Cryptocoryne wendtii recorded significantly high percentage cover In sites A (10%) and E (7%), The highest mean percentage cover of Salvinia ;nolesta (30%) were recorded in site E. The spatial variation of physico chemical parameters Indicated significantly high DO in sites E (10.61 mg/l) and F (10.28 mg/l). Significantly high Chl a concentrations were recorded from sites B, E and F. In addition, site F recorded significantly high BOD5 (6.56 mg/l), TN (0.04 mg/l) and COD (454.8 mg/l). There was no significant spatial variation of TP among sampling sites. S. molesta and E. crassipes showed positive correlations with Chl a and TP and N. rubra showed a positive correlation with TN. H. verticillata and P. stratiotes did not show significant correlations with water quality parameters. According to PCA, considering PC scores I to 3, site A in the non-rehabilitated area was characterized by N. ampla and C. wendtii, site B by E. crassipes and P. stratiotes and site C by A. glabra. In rehabilitated area, site D was characterized by C. iria and Ceratophyllum demersum, site E by S. molesta and site F by N, rubra. The PCA based on water quality parameters grouped the sites E and F together and were characterized by high TN and Chl a concentrations. The results of the present study indicated that there is significant spatial variation of percentage macrophyte cover in relation to water quality parameters. Further, this study identified S. molesia and Eichhornia crassipes and N. rubr.a as suitable indicator of Chl a and TP and TN in wetland health monitoring studies.
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    Abundance-Biomass Comparison approach to assess the environmental stressors in Diyawannawa wetland in monsoonal and non-monsoonal seasons
    (Sri Lanka J. Aquat. Sci, 2018) Wijeyaratne, W.M.D.N.; Bellanthudawa, B.K.A.
    Abundance-Biomass Comparison (ABC) approach is a graphical approach that compares the abundance and biomass of organisms in order to predict the environmental stress level of an ecosystem. The present study was conducted in selected sites located at non-rehabilitated and rehabilitated areas of the Diyawannawa wetland in Sri Lanka in the monsoonal and non-monsoonal seasons. The ABC was performed on the macrobenthic mollusk species collected from the study sites. Eight species of macrobenthic mollusks, namely, Bithynia tentaculata, Melanoides turbeculata, Melanoides turriculus, Thiara scabra, Lamellidens marginalis, Pila globosa, Gyraulus saigonensis and Lymnaea stagnalis were recorded during the study period. Based on Principal Component Analysis, B. tentaculata, and, P. globosa were identified as characteristic gastropod species that could be used to classify study sites in the rehabilitated and non-rehabilitated areas of this tropical wetland system. In the monsoonal season, overlapping cumulative percentage dominance of abundance and cumulative percentage dominance of biomass curves in sites A, B, and F indicated partially disturbed environmental conditions. The site C of the non-rehabilitated area, showed a typical undisturbed condition and the sites D and E of the rehabilitated area the cumulative percentage dominance of biomass curve was located above the abundance curve, indicating disturbed environmental conditions in these sites during monsoonal season. During the non-monsoonal season in all the sites except site F of the rehabilitated area, the cumulative percentage dominance of abundance curve was located above the biomass curve, indicating undisturbed environmental conditions in these sites. In the site F, the cumulative percentage dominance of abundance and the cumulative percentage dominance of biomass curves were crossing each other, indicating partially disturbed environmental conditions at this site. The values of the W statistic, which ranged from 0.004 to 0.374 in the non-monsoonal season and ranged from 0.1 to 0.2 in the monsoonal season, and pollution and water quality categorization by modified biotic index (MBI) were in agreement with the results of the ABC approach.