Estuaries along the coast of India
An estuary is a channel that has the sea at one end and a river at the other;
in an estuary, seawater is appreciably diluted. The complete salinity range
from 0-35 ppt is seen from the head (river end) to the mouth (sea end) of
an estuary. About 100 such channels of varying sizes and shapes occur
along the coast of India. Each estuary receives its freshwater from drainage
channels of a river basin. The major river basins of India are shown in Fig.
28 together with some of the major riverine/estuarine channels. The banks
of estuarine channels form a favoured location for human settlements, which
use the estuaries for fishing and commerce, but nowadays also for dumping
civic and industrial waste. Estuaries are usually biologically highly
productive zones. They also act as a filter for some dissolved
constituents in river water; these precipitate in the zone where river water meets seawater. More
important is the trapping of
suspended mud and sand
carried by rivers which
leads to
delta formations around estuaries. Major
estuaries occur in the Bay
of Bengal. Many estuaries
are locations of some of the
major seaports. Most of the
India’s major estuaries
occur on the east coast. In
contrast, the estuaries on
the west coast are smaller.
Two typical examples of
estuaries on the west coast
are the Mandovi and Zuari estuaries located to the north and south of the main campus of the
National Institute of Oceanography at Dona Paula, Goa.
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