Great Kwa River
Coordinates: 4°46′55″N 8°23′53″E / 4.781903°N 8.398018°E
The Great Kwa River (also called Kwa Ibo River or Kwa River) flows through Cross River State, Nigeria, draining the east side of the city of Calabar. The river ecology is under threat from human activity.
Location
The river originates in the Oban Hills, in the Cross River National Park, and flows southwards to the Cross River estuary.[1] The river is known for the dramatic Kwa Falls in Cross River National Park.[2] Its lower reaches are tidal, with broad mud flats. and drain the eastern coast of the city of Calabar.[1]
Human activity
Human activity in the Great Kwa basin has traditionally been limited to small scale farming, aquaculture and artisanal fisheries, mainly for shrimp. However, Calabar is growing, due in part to the Calabar Free Trade Zone, causing growing numbers of houses and factories to be built in the freshwater and mangrove swamps of the Great Kwa.[1] The University of Calabar covers a 17-hectare (42-acre) site between the Great Kwa River and the Calabar River. The university has acquired more land on both banks of the Great Kwa for future development.[3]
Pollution
Calabar Municipality has no waste treatment facilities, and heavy rains wash human and industrial wastes into the river.[1] A 2008 study of Vibrio bacteria in shellfish in the Great Kwa River estuary showed that the water was constantly faecally polluted, and the shellfish had high levels of infection. This posed a health risk for consumer, including a risk of cholera epidemics.[4]
References
- 1 2 3 4 E. R. Akpan; J. O. Offem; A. E. Nya. "Baseline ecological studies of the Great Kwa River, Nigeria I: Physico-chemical studies". EcoServ. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
- ↑ M. U. Igboekwe; I. E. Udoinyang (29 June 2011). "Modeling the transport of suspended particulate matter by Kwa Ibo River, Umudike, South-eastern Nigeria: Implications for pollutant dispersion" (PDF). Retrieved 2011-09-09.
- ↑ "About Us". University of Calabar. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
- ↑ Eja ME, Abriba C, Etok CA, Ikpeme EM, Arikpo GE, Enyi-Idoh KH, Ofor UA (2008 Jul 15.). "Seasonal occurrence of vibrios in water and shellfish obtained from the Great Kwa River estuary, Calabar, Nigeria.". Bull Environ Contam Toxicol. 81 (3): 245–8. doi:10.1007/s00128-008-9482-x. PMID 18626562. Check date values in:
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