For millions of people worldwide, sewage-polluted surface waters threaten water security, food security and human health. Yet the extent of the problem and its causes are poorly understood. Given rapid widespread global urbanisation, the impact of urban versus rural populations is particularly important but unknown. Exploiting previously unpublished archival data for the Ganga (Ganges) catchment, we find a strong non-linear relationship between upstream population density and microbial pollution, and predict that these river systems would fail faecal coliform standards for irrigation waters available to 79% of the catchment’s 500 million inhabitants. Overall, this work shows that microbial pollution is conditioned by the continental-scale n...
This paper reports the results of a 2-year study of water quality in the River Enborne, a rural rive...
Industrialization, urbanization, population explosion and green revolution have deteriorated the var...
Acknowledgments The authors wish to thank Paul Scott, Richard Rance and other members of the Wellcom...
The sixth UN Sustainable Development Goal, Clean Water and Sanitation, directly underpins other goal...
Waterborne diseases, often arising from freshwater pollution, are a leading cause of mortality in de...
The climatic variations, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, non-regulated extraction of water...
Journal of Water and HealthTropical communities in the developing world depend heavily on riverine s...
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.This study considers t...
Published Article•The influence of a developing community on the water quality of an urban river is ...
Historically, improvements in municipal water quality led to substantial mortality decline in today’...
Contamination of surface and groundwater systems with human and animal faecal matter leads to exposu...
Faecal pathogens can be introduced into surface water through open defecation, illegal disposal and ...
Most ancient civilizations grew along the banks of rivers. Even today, millions of people all over t...
Anthropogenic landscape alterations have increased global carbon transported by rivers to oceans sin...
Industrialization, urbanization, population explosion and green revolution have deteriorated the var...
This paper reports the results of a 2-year study of water quality in the River Enborne, a rural rive...
Industrialization, urbanization, population explosion and green revolution have deteriorated the var...
Acknowledgments The authors wish to thank Paul Scott, Richard Rance and other members of the Wellcom...
The sixth UN Sustainable Development Goal, Clean Water and Sanitation, directly underpins other goal...
Waterborne diseases, often arising from freshwater pollution, are a leading cause of mortality in de...
The climatic variations, global warming, greenhouse gas emissions, non-regulated extraction of water...
Journal of Water and HealthTropical communities in the developing world depend heavily on riverine s...
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.This study considers t...
Published Article•The influence of a developing community on the water quality of an urban river is ...
Historically, improvements in municipal water quality led to substantial mortality decline in today’...
Contamination of surface and groundwater systems with human and animal faecal matter leads to exposu...
Faecal pathogens can be introduced into surface water through open defecation, illegal disposal and ...
Most ancient civilizations grew along the banks of rivers. Even today, millions of people all over t...
Anthropogenic landscape alterations have increased global carbon transported by rivers to oceans sin...
Industrialization, urbanization, population explosion and green revolution have deteriorated the var...
This paper reports the results of a 2-year study of water quality in the River Enborne, a rural rive...
Industrialization, urbanization, population explosion and green revolution have deteriorated the var...
Acknowledgments The authors wish to thank Paul Scott, Richard Rance and other members of the Wellcom...