Dâmbovnic River

Dâmbovnic River
River
Countries Romania
Counties Argeş County,
Dâmboviţa County,
Teleorman County
Giurgiu County
Tributaries
 - left Mozacu, Glogoveanu, Jirnov
 - right Raţa, Gliganu, Berivoaia, Şelaru
Villages Bradu,
Suseni,
Pădureni,
Gălăşeşti,
Bârlogu,
Negraşi,
Mozăceni,
Slobozia,
Fierbinţi,
Vătaşi,
Drăghineşti,
Cartojani,
Sadina,
Roata de Jos,
Mârșa
Mouth Neajlov
 - location Vadu Lat

The Dâmbovnic River is a tributary of the Neajlov River in Romania. It is named sometimes Dîmbovnic or Drâmbovnic,[1] depending on map and source.

Geography

The river flows through four different counties: Argeș, Dâmbovița, Teleorman and Giurgiu.[2] It flows from North-West to South-East and forms near the high plains of Piteşti, where it receives residual water from Arpechim. Then, it passes through the Găvanu-Burdea Plain and finally ends into the Neajlov River, near Clejani. The total length is 110 km.[2] It is a permanent river.

Protected areas

At the confluence with the river Mozacu, is a small reservation, Negraşi Daffodil Meadow.

Human impact on the river

The only part of the valley that is not affected by human activities is the upper part, above the Dâmbovnic Lake.[3] At this part, the river can dry up in summer.

The only lake[4] is the Dâmbovnik Lake, situated at the place where the residual water from Arpechim flows into the river through a 5.8 km long canal. The lake is very important and is used as a cleaning station for the toxic wastes. Work is done in order to remove the toxic sediments in the lake and to improve the natural and artificial filters. Downstream, the river is drained.

Pollution

In the past, the water was very polluted.[5] This affects the river itself, underground water and local villages. The main source of pollution is the Arpechim Refinery. Even today, when the filters stop working,[6] the river is again polluted. To stop this disaster, record fines were given recently.[7] However, there are other sources of pollution, like petrol, when oil pipes are broken by thieves.[8] In the lower part of the valley, pollution may accidentally come from local villagers who wash their cars and animals in the river or take construction materials from the riverbed.[9]

However, recent studies[9] show that the ecosystems are not endangered. Fish exist again and there are many plants near and in the water.

The underground water is severely polluted.[10] As a result, water from local fountains is not drinkable. Especially in the villages that are upstream, people drink water from local public sources. In Rociu, water is pumped from 150 to 200 meters deep.[11]

References

Maps

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 03, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.