Research Updates

 

Spatio A better understanding of the trends in rainfall, its distribution and characteristics is of paramount importance, for effective management of water resources, especially, in regions with marked spatiotemporal variability in rainfall. The present study examines the spatiotemporal changes in rainfall pattern and its effect on the hydrological regime of a tropical monsoon dominated region in Western Ghats, India. Weakening of monsoon rains was observed in the region, with decreasing trend in monsoon season, increasing trend in pre-monsoon season as well as an accelerated change in rainfall pattern during the recent decades. Monsoon droughts are becoming more prominent as evidenced the increasing trend in total number of dry and prolonged dry spells. Seasonality Index of rainfall consistently showed decreasing trend indicating that the rainfall distribution is becoming more symmetric over the years. No significant relationship was observed between ENSO events and rainfall characteristics indicating that ENSO episodes do not considerably affect the variability of rainfall in the region. Effect of changes in rainfall characteristics have a strong bearing on the hydrological regime of the region, which was evident in the declining trend of streamflow and groundwater level. The study calls for a revised plan for water management, adaptive cropping pattern and reservoir operations in the state of Kerala.

Bibliographic Info: Merin Mariam Mathew, Sreelash, K., Micky Mathew, Arulbalaji, P., Padmalal, D. [2021]. Spatiotemporal variability of rainfall and its effect on hydrological regime in a tropical monsoon-dominated domain of Western Ghats, India. Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies, Vol. 36, Art. 100861. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrh.2021.100861

 

×

 

This research incorporates iron-loaded crosslinked chitosan (CS) polymeric structure into the interlayer lattice space of Montmorillonite clay (MT) to enhance the phosphate adsorption capacity of MT. The synthesized Fe-loaded crosslinked chitosan montmorillonite composite (Fe-CS-MT) is evaluated effectively for phosphate removal from aqueous media. Batch adsorption experiments optimized the influence of adsorption parameters, i.e., contact time (50 min), solution pH (3), and adsorbent dosage (2 g L−1) for phosphate removal. The experimental results of equilibrium and kinetic studies indicated that phosphate adsorption on Fe-CS-MT follows Pseudo-second-order kinetic and Freundlich isotherm models with a high degree of accuracy. A series of analytical tools used to profile the investigated material's surface features involves CHNS Analyser, SEM-EDX, FTIR, XRD, XRF, UV-Visible Spectrophotometer, TGA, DSC, and surface analysis. The calculations of the thermodynamic study confirmed the endothermic and spontaneous nature of the phosphate adsorption process. This study presents an eco-friendly adsorbent tested in natural conditions to assess the feasibility of removing phosphate from an aqueous phase.

Bibliographic Info: Sandhya Sudhakaran, Elezabeth, V. A., Harsha Mahadevan, Anoop Krishnan, K. [2021]. Crosslinked chitosan-montmorillonite biocomposite with Fe intercalation: Enhancing surface chemistry for improved phosphate adsorption. Surfaces and Interfaces, Vol. 27, Art. 101468. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surfin.2021.101468

 

 

Grazing The Netravathi estuary is a micro- to mesotidal, tropical, shallow estuary with an abundant density of phytoplankton. The impact of the zooplankton grazing rate and the selected environmental variables on the phytoplankton community structure was studied seasonally from 2017 to 2019. Microplanktons of centric diatoms such as Skeletonema costatum and Cosinodiscus radiatus dominated during monsoon seasons, whereas dinoflagellates such as Peridinium sp. and Ceratium furca were observed in high numbers at the estuary during non-monsoon seasons. Water temperature showed a strong association with grazing rates of microzooplankton (r = 0.910). Canonical correspondence analysis studies established an intensification in grazing rate during non-monsoon seasons by calanoid copepods which in turn occasioned the reduction of microplanktons belonging to diatoms. Moreover, during monsoon seasons, diminution in grazing rates of calanoid copepods coupled with the presence of micro larvae as a secondary consumer of zooplankton resulted in the proliferation of centric diatoms. The grazing behaviour of microzooplankton affected the phytoplankton species diversity of the estuary in a negative manner (D = 0.29 in 2017 Pre-M, D = 0.76 in 2019 Pre-M). Selective grazing behaviour of calanoid copepods concerning temperature alteration exerted a strong influence in determining the phytoplankton community structure of the estuary to a great extent.

Bibliographic Info: Ratheesh Kumar, M., Anoop Krishnan, K. [2021]. Grazing behaviour of tropical calanoid copepods and its effect on phytoplankton community structure. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, Vol. 193 (8), Art. 495. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10661-021-09306-5

 

×

 

Reconst Recurrent sea-level changes are reflected in the formation of coastal landforms; estuary, lakes, lagoons and barrier beaches during the late Quaternary period along the Kerala coast, SW India. The sediment core from these landforms was addressed for sediment lithofacies, geochemical parameters and associated foraminiferal assemblages to reconstruct the late Quaternary environment. The textural characteristics of the sediment indicate a shallow marine to lagoon and swampy/marsh environment. A layer of coarse sandy sediment (7–9 m thickness) is overlying the late Pleistocene (40 Kyrs BP) sediment sequence. The sediment was deposited under violent to the calm environment attributing its deposition in diverse energy regimes. This is also corroborated with the micro-textures of quartz grains. The geochemical elemental relationship (Rb vs K2O, Ni vs TiO2, K2O/Na2O vs SiO2/Al2O3, discriminant function) is established with paleoweathering, provenance and tectonic setting. An abundant population of Ammonia beccarii, A. tepida, E. discoidale, N. scaphum. A. beccarii in the sediments reveals their high tolerance and adaptability to the changing environment. The multiproxy studies on sediments, support a stronger monsoon in the early Holocene leading to the incursion of high-water levels, increased flow discharge and bottom scouring but, weak monsoon and arid climate prevailed during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). A conceptual model is proposed to depict the shoreline evolution and its climate.

Bibliographic Info: Varghese T. I., Prakash, T N., Sheela Nair, L., Sreenivasulu, G., Nagendra, R. [2021]. Reconstruction of the paleoenvironment of the late Quaternary sediments of the Kerala coast, SW India. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, Vol. 222, Art. 104952. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2021.104952

 

×

Tropical Tropical urbanized coastal regions are hotspots for the discharge of nutrient-enriched groundwater, which can affect sensitive coastal ecosystems. Here, we investigated how a beach modifies groundwater nutrient loads in southern India (Varkala Beach), using flux measurements and stable isotopes. Fresh groundwater was highly enriched in NO3 from sewage or manure. Submarine groundwater discharge and nearshore groundwater discharge were equally important contributors to coastal NO3 fluxes with 303 mmol NO3 m–1 day–1 in submarine and 334 mmol NO3 m–1 day–1 in nearshore groundwater discharge. However, N/P ratios in nearshore groundwater discharge were up to 3 orders of magnitude greater than that in submarine groundwater, which can promote harmful algae blooms. As groundwater flowed through the beach, N/P ratios decreased toward Redfield ratios due to the removal of 30–50% of NO3 due to denitrification and production of PO4 due to mineralization of organic matter. Overall, tropical beaches can be important natural biogeochemical reactors that attenuate nitrogen pollution and modify N/P ratios in submarine groundwater discharge.

Bibliographic Info: Oehler, T., Murugan, R., Mintu E. George, Suresh Babu, D. S., Dähnke, K., Ankele, M., Böttcher, M. E., Santos, I. R., Moosdorf, N. [2021]. Tropical beaches attenuate groundwater nitrogen pollution flowing to the ocean. Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 55 (12), pp. 8432-8438. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c00759

 

×