1st Edition

Water Resources Strategies to Increase Food Production in the Semi-Arid Tropics UNESCO-IHE PhD Thesis

By David Love Copyright 2013
    262 Pages 80 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Water demand in southern Africa continues to rise, as urban areas expand and as agricultural water demand rises to meet the millennium development food security goals. Water resource availability in the northern Limpopo Basin has declined over the last 30 years, and will decline further under climate change. In this study, water resources modelling is used to quantify the effect of water resources strategies and climatic conditions on water resources availability. This is coupled with water balance modelling to evaluate the potential of alluvial aquifers, which form the beds of sand rivers.

    The greatest benefit for the least impact comes from strategies providing for better land and soil/water management, such as changing from maize to small grains, production of livestock fodder and conservation agriculture. Small dams are a key resource to rural communities, and change to Multiple Use Systems through abstraction of water for irrigation has clear benefits locally. There is also great potential for the exploitation of alluvial aquifers for water supply. Better management of existing large dams, together with conjunctive use of alluvial groundwater and several reservoirs could increase productive use of water and significantly improve livelihoods without the construction of new reservoirs.

    1. Introduction
    2. Implementing the millennium development food security goals - challenges of the southern African context
    3. Changing hydroclimatic and discharge patterns in the northern Limpopo Basin, Zimbabwe
    4. Rainfall-interception-evaporation-runoff relationships in a semi-arid catchment, northern Limpopo Basin, Zimbabwe
    5. Regionalising a meso-catchment scale conceptual model for river basin management in the semi-arid environment
    6. An evaluation of the water supply potential of small sand rivers in the northern Limpopo Basin
    7. A water balance modelling approach to optimising the use of water resources in ephemeral sand rivers
    8. Water Resource Constraints and Opportunities to Increasing Dryland Food Security
    9. Conclusions and Recommendations

    Biography

    Born in 1975 in Lusaka, Zambia, David Love is a Senior Consultant with Golder Associates Africa’s Groundwater & Geochemistry Division. He holds a BSc from the University of Zimbabwe, a BSc Honours and MSc from the University of Stellenbosch and is a Fellow of the Water Institute of Southern Africa. David received the Tison award from the International Association of Hydrological Sciences in 2012 and the Phaup Award from the Geological Society of Zimbabwe in 2006 for work in his PhD thesis. David previously was manager of WaterNet, a SADC subsidiary institution, and served as the Chair of the Pan-African Steering Committee of the Partnership for Agricultural Water in Africa (AgWA) and a Visiting Scientist with ICRISAT. David is married to Faith, who is also a water and environmental scientist. They have two children, Kathleen Taboka and James Robert Langanani. David and Faith also farm cattle in southern Zimbabwe.