EFFECTS OF PH AND SALINITY ON THE SEDIMENTATION OF CLAY PARTICLES IN TURBID LAKES OF THE RIFT VALLEY OF ETHIOPIA AND KENYA

Authors

  • A. Hennesey
  • A.W. Yasindi
  • Gebre-Mariam Zinabu
  • W.D. Taylor

Keywords:

Abaya, Baringo, Clay, Lake restoration, Langano, Sedimentation, Turbidity

Abstract

Some lakes in the Rift Valley of East Africa are among the
most productive in the world, while others are dystrophic, possessing a
stable, opaque suspension of fine silt or clay. Understanding the causes of
flocculation and sedimentation of this material could provide insight into why
these lakes are so turbid. We collected samples of suspended clay from three
turbid lakes (Langano and Abaya in Ethiopia, and Baringo in Kenya),
measured the size-distribution and organic content of their suspended
sediment, and performed laboratory studies of sedimentation rate as a
function of pH and salinity. Most of the turbidity in the two Ethiopian lakes
was due to particles between 0.5 and 1.5 µm, and the suspended material had
a low organic content and C/N ratio in all the three lakes. Sedimentation
velocity of the material increased with both salinity and pH, with velocities
varying from near 0 at neutral pH and low salinity, to 3 cm h-1
as pH
approached 12 or salinity approached 25 ppt in the case of Lake Abaya.
These results may explain why it is only freshwater lakes that demonstrate
these turbid clay suspensions, and suggest mechanisms through which their
turbidity might be altered.

Published

2023-04-10