Water, Sewage & Effluent September-October 2017 | Page 18

A rare image of a cross section of a ‘weeping’ wetland, showing the amount of moisture held in the soil. Wetland hopes dampened With the relentless urban sprawl, the country’s wetlands are coming under continuous assault as all manner of waste is thrown into these sensitive and vital ecological worlds. By Kim Kemp P aul Fairall, principal consultant for Emifula, riverine and wetland remedial consultants and associates, has been in the field for 27 years, focusing on saving the environment (all fauna and flora) of wetlands specifically. His passion is obvious as he enthuses, “Wetlands are the most superb example of a self- contained micro environment.” From wetland to wasteland Fairall outlines that in 1996, the United Nations appointed over 400 engineers from 94 countries to investigate the 16 state of wetlands worldwide, and they concluded that 50% of the world’s wetlands had been lost forever. “It’s a unique ecological framework that you can impact on, but it can also be totally destroyed,” the expert comments. He points out that our ancestors are hugely to blame for the disappearance of wetlands: “Unfortunately, the pioneers of modern, older cities, such as Cape Town or London, entirely obliterated the pre-existing wetlands on which those cities are built.” Ignorance has played its part in the destruction of wetlands, which are often viewed as inconvenient, bog-like Water Sewage & Effluent September/October 2017 areas into which all manner of waste can be funnelled, from garbage and industrial effluent to raw sewage. “We throw anything into these vital areas because it drains away from the river. However, rivers and wetlands are inseparable: if rivers are the arteries of the world, the wetlands would be the kidneys. They act as a sponge, retaining water. In that process, they cleanse the water and they remove and sequester the heavy metals,” Fairall explains. The challenge however, he adds, is the removal of phosphates and nitrates, both to blame for algae blooms, the weed-like plants that strangle