Water quality challenges associated with industrial logging of a karst landscape: Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands

Mar Pollut Bull. 2021 Aug:169:112506. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112506. Epub 2021 May 27.

Abstract

Human disturbance of karst landscapes in tropical volcanic islands present a unique challenge for understanding sediment transport to the coastal zone. Here we present the first evidence of urban drinking water quality impacts from industrial logging in the Solomon Islands. Despite only 6% of the Honiara's drinking water catchment being disturbed by logging, rhodamine dye tracers demonstrated complex karst sinkholes that led to high suspended sediment concentrations being transported from neighbouring Kovi catchment into the Kongulai water supply offtake point for Honiara. This has resulted in the exceedance of practical treatment thresholds of 20 NTU 9.5% of the time, leading to water supply for the majority of Honiara's residents being unavailable for 58 days in 2019. This work highlights the cost-benefit disparity between industrial logging yielding minimal short-term economic yields in comparison to on-going broader impacts of increased coastal sediment transport while restricting water supply to a developing nation's capital.

Keywords: Karst; Logging; NDVI; Remote sensing; Sediment; Turbidity; Water quality.

MeSH terms

  • Drinking Water*
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Humans
  • Melanesia
  • Water Quality*
  • Water Supply

Substances

  • Drinking Water