Spatial Distribution of Heavy Metals in Msimbazi River Mangrove Sediments in Dar es Salaam coastal zone, Tanzania

dc.creatorAgnes, Mrutu
dc.creatorNkotagu, Hudson H.
dc.creatorLuilo, Gebhard B.
dc.date2016-09-21T16:55:12Z
dc.date2016-09-21T16:55:12Z
dc.date2013
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-27T08:58:08Z
dc.date.available2018-03-27T08:58:08Z
dc.descriptionFull text can be accessed at http://search.proquest.com/openview/fb40b0c17b3a25f2d65474b08a0bfbd6/1?pq-origsite=gscholar
dc.descriptionThis article, reports on distribution of heavy metals in sediments of the Msimbazi River mangrove forest. The levels of heavy metal decreased with increasing depth as well as with increasing distance from mangrove to the Indian Ocean shoreline. The total metal levels of heavy metals ranged from 1000 ppm to 27000 ppm (iron, Fe), 16 ppm to 173 ppm (zinc, Zn), 3.1 ppm to 76 ppm (lead, Pb), 13.2 ppm to 71.2 ppm (chromium, Cr), 6.9 ppm to 22.5 ppm (nickel. Ni), 4.1 ppm to 17.4 ppm (cobalt, Co) and 0.03 ppm to 3.90 ppm (cadmium, Cd). These observations indicate that, Msimbazi River sediments have high metal retention. This is attributed, among other factors, to clay contents at 0-50 cm core that ranged from 15.78% to 85.04 % and its content decreased with increasing depth. Thus, the Msimbazi River sediments play a role in filtering heavy metals from the wastewater flowing through it prior to its discharge into Indian Ocean.
dc.identifierMrutu, A., Nkotagu, H.H. and Luilo, G.B., 2013. Spatial distribution of heavy metals in Msimbazi River mangrove sediments in Dar es Salaam coastal zone, Tanzania. International Journal of Environmental Sciences, 3(5), p.1641.
dc.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/4087
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11810/4087
dc.languageen
dc.titleSpatial Distribution of Heavy Metals in Msimbazi River Mangrove Sediments in Dar es Salaam coastal zone, Tanzania
dc.typeJournal Article

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