Hydrochemical variations of a tropical mountain river system in a rain shadow region of the southern Western Ghats, Kerala, India
Thomas, J; Joseph, S; Thrivikramji, KP
River water chemistry of Pambar River Basin (PRB), draining a rain shadow region of the southern Western Ghats, India, with granite gneiss and hornblende-biotite-gneiss lithology, was monitored for three sampling seasons, such as monsoon (MON), post-monsoon (POM) and pre-monsoon (PRM) to ascertain the spatio-temporal trends in hydrochemistry. In PRB, upstream and downstream areas have differing climate (i.e., tropical-wetedry/humid upstream, while semi-arid downstream) and land use (plantations and farmland dominate the upstream, while pristine forest environment covers the downstream). The hydrochemical attributes, except pH and K+, exhibit distinct temporal variation mainly due to monsoon-driven climatic seasonality. Relative abundance of cations between upstream and downstream samples of PRB shows noticeable differences, in that the upstream samples follow the order of abundance: Ca2+ > Mg2+ > Na+ > K+, while the downstream samples are in the order: Na+ > Mg2+ > Ca2+ > K+. Ca2++Mg2+/Na+ + K+, Si/Na+ + K+, Cl-/ Na+ and HCO3-/Ca2+ ratios suggest multiple sources/processes controlling hydrochemistry, e.g., atmospheric supply, silicate weathering, dissolution of carbonate minerals and soil evaporites as well as anthropogenic inputs (domestic and farm/plantation residues). Even though weathering of silicate and carbonate minerals is the major hydrochemical driver in both upstream and downstream portions of PRB, Gibbs diagram and scatter plot of Mg2+/Na+ vs. Mg2+/Ca2+ imply the importance of evaporation in the downstream hydrochemistry. Piper diagram and partial pressure of CO2 (pCO(2)) values suggest that a groundwater dominated discharge exerts a significant control on the downstream hydrochemistry, irrespective of sampling season. Although spatial variability of rainfall in PRB shows a linear downstream (decreasing) trend, the best-fit model for the dissolved load suggests that the downstream hydrochemical variability in PRB (i.e., an increasing trend) follows a power function (f (x) = ax(k)). This study suggests that climate has a significant role in the spatio-temporal variability of hydrochemistry in PRB. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.