Water, Sewage & Effluent May-June 2018 | Page 20

Latest research shows that 64% of wetlands worldwide have been lost since 1900, and that 76% of populations of freshwater plants and animals have disappeared in the past 40 years alone (according to the 2015 WWF’s Living Planet report). Drought’s effect on wetlands As South Africa remains in the grip of a 100-year drought, we look at the impact this climatic phenomenon will have on our vital wetlands, the ‘lungs’ of the water catchment system. By Paul Fairall For the purpose of this article, we will use a valley bottom wetland decanting into a river as an example. A drought will severely affect wetland capacity and plants. One of the main functions of a wetland is the storage of water, which is slowly released into the catchment system over a period of several years. This storage ability will be seriously affected by a drought and the period of time that it will be able to decant into a catchment system will decrease exponentially. During the storage period in a wetland, numerous attributes of the water are 18 changed, led mostly by the purification of the water during the period it is stored in a wetland, including a vast amount of cleaning and purification of the water content. This process is facilitated by numerous wetland plant species as well as the sequencing of excess heavy metals, which are removed. The process is greatly enhanced by the anaerobic condition of the plants in the system. With the amount of water released into a catchment system decreasing, the water quality will also diminish in its clarity and quality. Certain impurities that would have been changed by the plants will also start declining and the Water Sewage & Effluent May/June 2018 amount of unpurified water entering the system will increase. The functionality of the wetland will be overall affected as the drought severity increases, as the amount of water released will diminish and its dilution effect to the catchment will start lessening, affecting the whole catchment. As wetland science is less than seventy years old, not enough research on a larger scale has been undertaken to provide an exact amount of all the effects a drought will have on wetlands in general. Owing to the fact that up to 90% of the wetland science has been