Floating debris from the Drina river
Апстракт
Floating debris accumulation in storage reservoirs of three dam sites in the river Drina catchment area in Serbia have been causing difficulties in operations and occasional loss of electricity. In the previous research it was suggested that the origin of floating debris could be related to landfills near the riverbanks. This paper attempts to strengthen the apparent connection between landfills and floating debris. As a first step, an inventory of landfills in the Drina River catchment area was assembled. It was found that all municipal landfills in the catchment area are uncontrolled, with mixed, partly hazardous waste. Most of the landfills were located at the riverbanks or in the floodplain. Much of the wastes in contact with the surface water became floating debris. The landfills identified as potential sources of floating debris were potentially the sources of water pollution and could have a profound impact on the river environment. It appears that the most affected water body i...s the last downstream reservoir of the Drina River due to a cumulative effect of the upstream landfill activities, as well as due to other anthropogenic pressures. The international watershed of the Drina River includes three countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia, thus the problem of floating debris is a regional ecological problem. In order to address this problem and find solutions, it was proposed to identify floating debris as a common and urgent problem in this area, and furthermore to develop a comprehensive plan for future actions.
Кључне речи:
uncontrolled landfills / surface water / floating debrisИзвор:
Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 2012, 7, 2, 5-12Финансирање / пројекти:
- Electro Resources Management Company of Serbia [11191/2004]
- Institute for Water Resources "Jaroslav Cemi"
- Hydropower Plant "Zvornik" [817/11]
- Institute for water resources "Jaroslav Cemi" Belgrade, Serbia [817/11]
Институција/група
Šumarski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Zupanski, Danica AU - Ristić, Ratko PY - 2012 UR - https://omorika.sfb.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/470 AB - Floating debris accumulation in storage reservoirs of three dam sites in the river Drina catchment area in Serbia have been causing difficulties in operations and occasional loss of electricity. In the previous research it was suggested that the origin of floating debris could be related to landfills near the riverbanks. This paper attempts to strengthen the apparent connection between landfills and floating debris. As a first step, an inventory of landfills in the Drina River catchment area was assembled. It was found that all municipal landfills in the catchment area are uncontrolled, with mixed, partly hazardous waste. Most of the landfills were located at the riverbanks or in the floodplain. Much of the wastes in contact with the surface water became floating debris. The landfills identified as potential sources of floating debris were potentially the sources of water pollution and could have a profound impact on the river environment. It appears that the most affected water body is the last downstream reservoir of the Drina River due to a cumulative effect of the upstream landfill activities, as well as due to other anthropogenic pressures. The international watershed of the Drina River includes three countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia, thus the problem of floating debris is a regional ecological problem. In order to address this problem and find solutions, it was proposed to identify floating debris as a common and urgent problem in this area, and furthermore to develop a comprehensive plan for future actions. T2 - Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences T1 - Floating debris from the Drina river EP - 12 IS - 2 SP - 5 VL - 7 UR - conv_2199 ER -
@article{ author = "Zupanski, Danica and Ristić, Ratko", year = "2012", abstract = "Floating debris accumulation in storage reservoirs of three dam sites in the river Drina catchment area in Serbia have been causing difficulties in operations and occasional loss of electricity. In the previous research it was suggested that the origin of floating debris could be related to landfills near the riverbanks. This paper attempts to strengthen the apparent connection between landfills and floating debris. As a first step, an inventory of landfills in the Drina River catchment area was assembled. It was found that all municipal landfills in the catchment area are uncontrolled, with mixed, partly hazardous waste. Most of the landfills were located at the riverbanks or in the floodplain. Much of the wastes in contact with the surface water became floating debris. The landfills identified as potential sources of floating debris were potentially the sources of water pollution and could have a profound impact on the river environment. It appears that the most affected water body is the last downstream reservoir of the Drina River due to a cumulative effect of the upstream landfill activities, as well as due to other anthropogenic pressures. The international watershed of the Drina River includes three countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Serbia, thus the problem of floating debris is a regional ecological problem. In order to address this problem and find solutions, it was proposed to identify floating debris as a common and urgent problem in this area, and furthermore to develop a comprehensive plan for future actions.", journal = "Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences", title = "Floating debris from the Drina river", pages = "12-5", number = "2", volume = "7", url = "conv_2199" }
Zupanski, D.,& Ristić, R.. (2012). Floating debris from the Drina river. in Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 7(2), 5-12. conv_2199
Zupanski D, Ristić R. Floating debris from the Drina river. in Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences. 2012;7(2):5-12. conv_2199 .
Zupanski, Danica, Ristić, Ratko, "Floating debris from the Drina river" in Carpathian Journal of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 7, no. 2 (2012):5-12, conv_2199 .