Ecology of Binwa a Western Himalayan Hill Stream in relation to Water Quality
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CWE.15.2.05
Binwa is a perennial hill stream of the Western Himalayan region of Himachal Pradesh. During the present investigation, four observation sites based on altitudinal differences were selected, i.e.,Kharli(S1), Baijnath (S2), near Chobin (S3), and Triveni (S4) and water samples were analyzed for physico-chemical and biological parameters for one year (Mar.2011-Feb.2012). Water temperature, water current, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, T.D.S., electric conductivity, total Hardness, phosphate, and nitrate had played an essential role in determining the variations in planktonic and macroinvertebrate fauna of the stream.Species diversity indices such as Simpson, Shannon and Wiener, and Margalef’s diversity index of macroinvertebrates were worked out for all the observation sites. Based on the comparison of physico-chemical parameters of water samples with different standards prescribed for drinking water, water quality index for four stations calculated. Similarly, EPT taxa (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Trichoptera) measured, and EPT index computed. The water quality of the stream deteriorates downstream from head to mouth due to different types of anthropogenic interferences. The findings revealed that stream has no pollution at S1, while it is oligotrophic from S2 toS3 and meso-oligotrophic at S4.
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Jindal R, Singh D. Ecology of Binwa a Western Himalayan Hill Stream in relation to Water Quality. Curr World Environ 2020; 15(2).
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.12944/CWE.15.2.05Copy the following to cite this URL:
Jindal R, Singh D. Ecology of Binwa a Western Himalayan Hill Stream in relation to Water Quality. Curr World Environ 2020; 15(2). Available from: https://bit.ly/2WpEGs5