Summary
Human beings use huge quantities of water every day for drinking, cleaning and various cultural functions and dispose of it as wastewater within sewage. With increase in population, the magnitude of this waste is multiplying enormously and beyond the recycling capacity of local ecosystems to become a major health and environmental hazard. Re-use of wastewater for afforestation purposes in the form of sewage silviculture combines the dual benefit of ‘water conservation’ with ‘environmental sanitation’. Such experiments are being carried out at the World Forest Arboretum in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. Biological treatment of the sewage before application, to improve its irrigational quality, to remove harmful chemicals and to prevent the risk of these passing into the human food chain is being undertaken. The aquatic weeds Lemna and Eichhornia are being used to purify the wastewater. The technique is both economically viable and ecologically sustainable.
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References
Anonymous (1991) Reclaiming wastewater.SPAN Magazine, June.
Cave Shane (1991) A green revolution down at the sewer ponds,Our Planet,3(5), 10–11.
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Dr Rajiv K. Sinha is assistant professor in Human Ecology at the University of Rajasthan.
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Sinha, R.K. Sewage as a resource: a case study of afforestation using sewage irrigation in Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. Environmentalist 16, 91–94 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01325100
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01325100