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Degradation of Indian wetlands and their restorution options

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Title Degradation of Indian wetlands and their restorution options
 
Creator Srivastava, N K
Ram, L C
Sinha, A K
 
Description 164-166
Wetlands are wide ranging natural and manmade, permanent, temporary or seasonal water bodies or water saturated lands,
fresh or saline waters. They are ecologically and economically important. In India, wetlands, both natural and manmade
of different morphometries and sizes are very common everywhere especially in the states of West Bengal, Assam, Orissa,
Andhra Pradesh, Tamilnadu and Kerala. The burgeoning human population, rapid industrialization, urbanization, expanding
agriculture, land fills by garbage and effluent discharges are quite responsible for degradation of wetlands. Incredible
efforts by Ministry of Environment (Wetland Unit), Indian Ramsar, Indian Unit of World Wide Fund for Nature
Conservation are on the move in identifying the wetlands of national importance, strategies for their conservation
and management. Detailed studies have been made on the wetlands, lakes and river corridors. The quantitative
potential of marginal vegetation as filters for soil, water and chemicals and as heavy metal harvesters have been
assessed and different restoration options are discussed.
 
Date 2009-02-18T07:24:19Z
2009-02-18T07:24:19Z
2007-12
 
Type Article
 
Identifier 0771-7706
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3146
 
Language en_US
 
Publisher CSIR
 
Source BVAAP Vol.15(2) [December 2007]