دورية أكاديمية

Ecohydrological implications of runoff harvesting in the headwaters of the Thukela River basin, South Africa

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Ecohydrological implications of runoff harvesting in the headwaters of the Thukela River basin, South Africa
المؤلفون: De Winnaar, Gary, Jewitt, Graham beeh@ukzn.ac.za
المصدر: Physics & Chemistry of the Earth - Parts A/B/C. May2010, Vol. 35 Issue 13/14, p634-642. 9p.
مصطلحات موضوعية: *ECOHYDROLOGY, *RAINFALL, *STREAMFLOW, *WATER harvesting, *GEOLOGICAL basins, *RIVERS, *BIODIVERSITY, *AQUATIC ecology
مصطلحات جغرافية: SOUTH Africa
مستخلص: Abstract: Hydrological regimes have an important influence on biodiversity, structure, and functioning of aquatic ecosystems. Unforeseen circumstances, both hydrologically and ecologically, caused by potential adoption and expansion of runoff harvesting innovations is of particular concern to water resource planners, as downstream river systems are likely to be adversely affected. This paper provides methods for determining the influence that large-scale adoption of runoff harvesting could have on downstream flow regimes by using a scenario-based approach, with the ACRU Agrohydrological model, to simulate the potential alteration of streamflow regimes due to runoff harvesting. Scenarios were based entirely on the spatial extent of impervious surfaces associated with rural homesteads, estimates of which were taken from current population data and used to establish the density of hypothetical runoff harvesting systems within a catchment setup. Daily streamflow simulation from nine Quaternary Catchments in the Thukela River basin provided suitable data series’ for analysis using the Indicators of Hydrological Alteration method to compute ecologically relevant hydrological parameters. The outcome of this ecohydrological study demonstrated that a relatively simple modelling exercise offers the potential to assess impacts that may arise from large-scale runoff harvesting. Results established that magnitudes of high and low flows of river flow regimes were most affected by runoff harvesting. Flow reduction was found to be most significant with low flows (up to 29%) in the case where the maximum runoff harvesting scenario was used. However, the majority of the IHA hydrological flow parameters revealed only slight impacts, even under circumstances where modelling scenarios were based on unrealistically high proportions of runoff harvesting. Increasing the spatial extent of runoff harvesting is thus expected to have a much greater impact at smaller spatial scales; water resources of small sub-catchments may become appreciably depleted where such catchments host excessive numbers of runoff harvesting systems. Therefore it is equally important to understand the more localised level of impacts of runoff harvesting on aquatic ecosystems, localised. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
قاعدة البيانات: Academic Search Index
الوصف
تدمد:14747065
DOI:10.1016/j.pce.2010.07.009