Part 4: You will hear a talk about mapping salinity intrusion in coastal delta regions.
Hello everyone. Today I’m going to talk about a project that focuses on mapping salinity intrusion in coastal delta regions, and why these maps have become essential for planning in agriculture and public health.
To begin with, salinity intrusion is the process where seawater moves inland and mixes with fresh water systems, such as rivers, canals and shallow groundwater. This becomes much more likely when river flow drops. In many deltas, the sharpest drop happens in the dry season, when there is less rainfall and upstream extraction is at its highest. When that happens, there is not enough freshwater pressure pushing seaward, so saltwater can advance further up the river mouth, in practice.
So why do we need to map the intrusion, rather than simply respond when people complain about salty water? The first reason is agriculture. Even a small rise in salt levels can reduce yields, and for some crops it makes the soil unusable. In our study area, farmers reported the biggest losses in rice, because it is particularly sensitive during the early growing stage, when seedlings have shallow roots and can’t tolerate stress. Once salinity crosses a certain threshold, the plants yellow, growth slows, and harvests fall sharply. If farmers know where the front is moving, they can delay planting, switch to more tolerant varieties, or protect fields with gates.
The second reason is domestic supply. As salinity rises, treatment plants may have to increase filtration or change their process entirely, which is expensive and sometimes beyond the capacity of rural systems. Even when a town has a plant, villages often rely on small pumps or taps, and those systems can’t cope with spikes. Mapping helps planners decide when to blend sources, when to truck water, and where to prioritise upgrades.
Historically, salinity maps were fairly crude. They were often based on a small number of samples collected from canals, sometimes only once every few weeks. That meant the maps lagged behind real conditions and failed to capture how quickly the salt front could move after a high tide or a week without rain. People would see a reassuring map, but by the time it reached decision-makers, the situation on the ground had already changed.
Our current approach is much more detailed. Field teams travel by boat and motorbike and measure salinity using hand-held electrical conductivity meters. These provide an immediate reading, which allows teams to take many more measurements in a single day and repeat them at key times, such as after spring tides. Each reading is logged with a GPS location, and the result is a network of points that can be updated regularly and compared across seasons. Over time, that network shows which channels respond quickly, which areas recover fast after rain, and which villages are consistently exposed.
We also combine field data with satellite imagery. Salinity stress often shows up first in vegetation. In particular, crops and mangroves can change colour as chlorophyll levels drop, so we track shifts in leaf colour to highlight areas that may be experiencing rising salinity even before farmers report problems. Satellites don’t measure salt directly in the water, but they give us a broader view in places that are difficult to reach or where budgets limit boat surveys.
Finally, mapping is only useful if it supports action. One measure is to install temporary barriers in smaller channels to reduce how far saltwater can travel on incoming tides. These are not permanent dams; they are often structures that can be removed when flow returns. Another is to improve household storage. In many villages, people are advised to collect rainwater and store it in large tanks, which provides a safer supply during peak intrusion. Good maps tell communities when to start filling those tanks and when it is safer to use surface water again.
So, to conclude, salinity intrusion mapping is not just a scientific exercise. It allows authorities to prioritise support, helps farmers adjust planting decisions, and gives communities practical options to protect their water supply. By linking measurements, a network database, and imagery, we can move from reacting late to planning ahead, which is exactly what deltas need as climate variability and demand for water both increase.