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Research Thrust To build evidence that improving water management through the IWRM paradigm improves rural livelihoods at the scale of the water management.

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Presentation on theme: "Research Thrust To build evidence that improving water management through the IWRM paradigm improves rural livelihoods at the scale of the water management."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Research Thrust To build evidence that improving water management through the IWRM paradigm improves rural livelihoods at the scale of the water management intervention: Field scale – farmers Local catchment scale – communities, villages Sub-basin scale – districts, provinces Basin scale – transboundary

3 Research Areas Improved understanding of water resources Farmer field-based action research (agriculture) Institutional Research

4 Water Resources Research

5 Rainfall and Runoff Variability

6 Rainfall-Runoff Modeling Good simulation of runoff within catchments SWAT (Soil Water Assessment Tool) model application in Olifants Reduction in streamflow with inc. land cover HBVx Model in Mzingwane Interception an important process (56% in a dry season 2006/07, 32 % of rainfall in normal season 2007/08) Stream flow driven by rapidly draining shallow groundwater Rainfall and runoff analyses (Pettitt Test) - change to drier regime since 1980

7 Runoff Generation Modelling

8 Hydrogeological Studies Small sand rivers Limitations Evaporation (< 100 km 2 give few months supply) Geology (seepage a stronger control than evap.) Large systems (Lower Mzingwane) –WAFLEX Model Alluvial aquifer can store up to 38million m 3 of water Additional 3600 ha of smallholder farms can be potentially irrigated with the water

9 Lower Mzingwane Current Max. smallholder irrigation from alluvial aquifers

10 Water Quality Challenges, esp. metal pollution Mozambique: Major problems with metals: Zn, Cu, Pb, Cd Design of a monitoring network done Zimbabwe Gold panning - potential Hg pollution in rivers Natural salinity in shallow groundwater Cadmium risk These studies and one from SA point to dangerous levels of Cd

11 Agricultural Research

12 Conservation Farming Zimbabwe planting basins, ripping, conventional spring and double ploughing Basin tillage showed lowest runoff Reduced runoff did not translate to highest yield under these conditions Modeling indicates that basins perform better Mozambique Basin tillage showed significant yield increase compared to conventional tillage

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14 Crop Water Productivity Crop simulation modeling in SA and field studies in Zimbabwe Increasing fertility (N) increases water productivity Crop water productivity (returns/mm) Use of the APSIM Model in simulating grain yield and crop water use APSIM performed well

15 Rainwater Harvesting Mozambique Inventory showed 21% adoption of pits compared to flood recession, small dams and road runoff Zimbabwe Evaluation of rainwater harvesting technologies in the Mzingwane Catchment Dead level contours perceived as most effective by farmers, but measurements?? Soil type and resource status were important factors South Africa Chololo pits increased maize grain yield compared to conventional farming

16 Supplemental Irrigation Rain fed vs supplemental irrigation in South Africa Drought year moisture deficit during flowering stage was reduced Supplementary irrigation raised yield from 0.6 to 2.0 t/ha

17 Soil Salinity Studies- Chokwe Salinity management strategies in irrigation Salinity reduces yield and hydrological processes play a role – potential to model the system?? Scenario analysis to improve irrigation performance and efficiency

18 Institutional Research

19 Models of Catchment Planning Mzingwane Catchment Council Changes in the structure of the model Understanding the role of women Outline plan, addressing weaknesses that were identified by PhD research Water chemistry results being taken seriously BUT, confusing messages on CA, dead level contours MCC appreciates the work of Phase PN17 so far

20 Evaluating Stakeholder Participation Water User level -Lowest to district/sub-catchment Water access Private, communal, generally poor access at user level Institutional processes ‘New’ institutions are a manifestation of negotiation processes by users Outside intervention dictates the processes Rights creation Appropriative rights the most common form of creation Communal rights do not mean much without a legitimate and acceptable enforcer

21 Institutional Mapping and Performance Water resource management at the local level – Mzingwane Identifying practices, linkages and weaknesses CA and donor influence Water resource planning The importance of the culture based normative framework in water resources management Approaches to planning for water resource – bottom up approach more relevant

22 Mainstreaming Capacity Building (CB) Outreach through capacity building in the communities and institutions CB was not follow-up or not a later add-on to research CB is mainstreamed: Integrated into project from planning stage onwards Involving all scientists Involving farmers and management agencies

23 Capacity Building & Knowledge Outputs 32 MSc students completed 2 in progress 8 females, 25 NARES staff PhD students: One student has graduated 3 more students likely to complete by Dec 2009 5 farmer groups supported Publications: 24 articles, 12 chapters, 81 conf. papers Workshops: 5 basin level, 8 catchment level workshops

24 Decision-Support: Integrative Modelling Coupling models into a decision support tool - ICHSEA ArcView 3.3 interface SWAT output to PARCHED-THIRST, its output to OLYMPE Uncertainty analysis in progress Scenarios: full-scale additional irrigation, supplementary irrigation, different water sources Strategic tool, not an operational tool

25 Constraints Rainfall variability and drought Staff turnover and brain drain Politico-economic conditions in Zimbabwe Budget constraints

26 Thank you!!!


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