Rainwater Harvesting In The Sahel
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Rainwater harvesting in the Sahel is a combination of "indigenous and innovative" agricultural strategies that "plant the rain" and reduce evaporation, so that crops have access to soil moisture for the longest possible period of time. In the resource-poor drylands of
the Sahel The Sahel (; ar, ساحل ' , "coast, shore") is a region in North Africa. It is defined as the ecoclimatic and biogeographic realm of transition between the Sahara to the north and the Sudanian savanna to the south. Having a hot semi-arid cli ...
region of Africa, irrigation systems and
chemical fertilizers A fertilizer (American English) or fertiliser (British English; see spelling differences) is any material of natural or synthetic origin that is applied to soil or to plant tissues to supply plant nutrients. Fertilizers may be distinct from ...
are often prohibitively expensive and thus uncommon: so increasing or maintaining crop yields in the face of climate change depends on augmenting the region's extant rainfed agriculture systems to "increase water storage within the soil and replenish soil nutrients." Rainwater harvesting is a form of agricultural water management. Rainwater harvesting is most effective when combined with systems for
soil regeneration Soil regeneration, as a particular form of ecological regeneration within the field of restoration ecology, is creating new soil and rejuvenating soil health by: minimizing the loss of topsoil, retaining more carbon than is depleted, boosting biodi ...
and organic-matter management.


Background

The
Sahel The Sahel (; ar, ساحل ' , "coast, shore") is a region in North Africa. It is defined as the ecoclimatic and biogeographic realm of transition between the Sahara to the north and the Sudanian savanna to the south. Having a hot semi-arid c ...
is an ecologically (rather than
geopolitically Geopolitics (from Greek γῆ ''gê'' "earth, land" and πολιτική ''politikḗ'' "politics") is the study of the effects of Earth's geography (human and physical) on politics and international relations. While geopolitics usually refers to ...
) defined region of Africa. The noun ''Sahel'' comes from the Arabic ''sāḥil'' ( ar, ساحل) describing a border, shore or edge, which aptly describes the transitional areas of Africa where savanna becomes the
hyper-arid A region is arid when it severely lacks available water, to the extent of hindering or preventing the growth and development of plant and animal life. Regions with arid climates tend to lack vegetation and are called xeric or desertic. Most a ...
Sahara Desert. (According to the ''Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Place Names'', "The Arabs considered the Sahara to be a huge ocean with the Sahel as its shore.") The Sahel crosses Senegal, The Gambia,
Mauritania Mauritania (; ar, موريتانيا, ', french: Mauritanie; Berber: ''Agawej'' or ''Cengit''; Pulaar: ''Moritani''; Wolof: ''Gànnaar''; Soninke:), officially the Islamic Republic of Mauritania ( ar, الجمهورية الإسلامية ...
, Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon,
Chad Chad (; ar, تشاد , ; french: Tchad, ), officially the Republic of Chad, '; ) is a landlocked country at the crossroads of North and Central Africa. It is bordered by Libya to the north, Sudan to the east, the Central African Republic ...
, Central African Republic, South Sudan,
Sudan Sudan ( or ; ar, السودان, as-Sūdān, officially the Republic of the Sudan ( ar, جمهورية السودان, link=no, Jumhūriyyat as-Sūdān), is a country in Northeast Africa. It shares borders with the Central African Republic t ...
, and
Eritrea Eritrea ( ; ti, ኤርትራ, Ertra, ; ar, إرتريا, ʾIritriyā), officially the State of Eritrea, is a country in the Horn of Africa region of Eastern Africa, with its capital and largest city at Asmara. It is bordered by Ethiopia ...
in a belt up to wide that spans from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to the Red Sea in the east. The Sahel is marked by decreasing levels of precipitation from south to north, but what defines a dryland ecosystem is not necessarily low rainfall. In some cases the dryness is due to persistent high levels of evaporation (due to heat or desiccating winds). Unpredictable rainfall is often also a factor. Population estimates of the Sahel vary depending on which political subdivisions are included, but the count is in the vicinity of 100 million people, including nearly a million refugees and internally displaced people. The countries of the Sahel region are mainly poor. For example, the Volta River basin is occupied by about 20 million people who live in the countries of Burkina Faso and Ghana; 61 percent of Burkinabe and 45 percent of Ghanaians live on less than per day. About 12 million farmers in the region (including people in Niger, Chad, Mauritania, Mali, and probably Burkina Faso and Senegal), are occasionally or "chronically vulnerable to food and nutrition insecurity." The Brookings Institution has described Sahelians as among the "most underprivileged, marginalized, and poorest people" on Earth.


Subsistence food production

Agriculture contributes between 10 and 70 percent of GDP to the economies of most sub-Saharan countries. The major agricultural systems of the Sahel are
oasis In ecology, an oasis (; ) is a fertile area of a desert or semi-desert environment'ksar''with its surrounding feeding source, the palm grove, within a relational and circulatory nomadic system.” The location of oases has been of critical imp ...
,
pastoral A pastoral lifestyle is that of shepherds herding livestock around open areas of land according to seasons and the changing availability of water and pasture. It lends its name to a genre of literature, art, and music (pastorale) that depicts ...
, and mixed production of cereals and root crops. The root crops are predominantly
sweet potato The sweet potato or sweetpotato (''Ipomoea batatas'') is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the Convolvulus, bindweed or morning glory family (biology), family, Convolvulaceae. Its large, starchy, sweet-tasting tuberous roots are used as a r ...
and cassava; cereals are predominantly
millet Millets () are a highly varied group of small-seeded grasses, widely grown around the world as cereal crops or grains for fodder and human food. Most species generally referred to as millets belong to the tribe Paniceae, but some millets al ...
and
sorghum ''Sorghum'' () is a genus of about 25 species of flowering plants in the grass family (Poaceae). Some of these species are grown as cereals for human consumption and some in pastures for animals. One species is grown for grain, while many othe ...
, with some maize; the "north-south rainfall gradient defines...a successive north-south dominance of millet, sorghum and maize."
Climate changes In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth's climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to ...
over the next 25 years are predicted to decrease Sahelian cereal production by double-digit percentages, largely due to increased heat. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an intergovernmental body of the United Nations. Its job is to advance scientific knowledge about climate change caused by human activities. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) a ...
also predicts double-digit decreases due to increased rainfall variability. Homegrown staple crops account for an estimated 90 percent of food consumption in the Sahel, and 90 percent of these crops are grown using exclusively rain-fed agriculture. A general African transition to first-world-style irrigation systems is considered unlikely, and the Sahel region has an "especially limited irrigation potential." According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, no more than 10 percent of African food production is likely to be grown under irrigation over the next 20 years. Mechanized irrigation, where it exists, is typically limited to more lucrative cash crops, rather than subsistence. Therefore, in order to increase or even maintain the Sahel's
dryland agriculture Dryland farming and dry farming encompass specific agricultural techniques for the non-irrigated cultivation of crops. Dryland farming is associated with drylands, areas characterized by a cool wet season (which charges the soil with virtuall ...
production capacity the "most logical strategy...will be improving rainfed productivity for most staples."


Rainfall and fertility

Precipitation patterns and soil quality are "key constraint in Sahelian food production. Rainfall levels are both generally low to start with and "highly variable" to complicate matters. This variability is a common cause of crop failure due to unpredictable "onset and distribution" of rainfall; cereal yields are impacted by the start date and duration of the rain as much as by the absolute quantity. The majority of the year is the dry season, which ends with
harmattan The Harmattan is a season in West Africa that occurs between the end of November and the middle of March. It is characterized by the dry and dusty northeasterly trade wind, of the same name, which blows from the Sahara over West Africa into the ...
winds blowing dust south from the Sahara; rain usually falls between one and four months of the year, from June through September. Soils in the Sahel are typically degraded, often "crusty, abandoned agricultural lands" and "particularly poor in organic carbon." In Burkina Faso, one-third of all land is degraded. The human-induced structural damage to soils wrought by intensive 20th-century agriculture methods "is especially evident during droughts when the land is stripped bare of vegetation and erosive winds and water take their toll." In addition to the toll of soil and wind erosion on old fields, the practices of burning or removing crop residues, and a shift to fewer or no fallowing periods due to increased population density (and commensurate increased need to cultivate all accessible land) have contributed to further decreases in natural fertility. The Sahel is dappled with "unproductive crusty patches" found on "old dunes, sandy plains, colluvial slopes, and alluvial terraces." These "glazed" patches are regionally known as ''glacis'' and are found, for example, on approximately 60 percent of all degraded land in Niger. "''Glacis''" describes a slope made particularly slippery, for whatever reason, and is related to the Old French ''glacier''. ''Glacis'' patches in the Sahel are more or less impermeable; rainwater runs off or evaporates, further immiserating the soil biome, and thus the plants and the people.


Climate change

Even before the full impact of climate change is felt in the Sahel, the region struggles with challenges including "unsustainable management strategies, weak economies, weak infrastructure, 'inappropriate resource tenure', inappropriate interventions (such as eucalyptus plantations), ndineffective institutions." The future of the Sahel is insecure. Climate change impacts will be variable but there is a "likelihood of negative impacts in most locations from increased temperatures, greater rainfall variability, and more extreme weather events."


Rainwater harvesting techniques of the Sahel

The purpose of rainwater harvesting in the Sahel and other dryland eco-agricultural regions is to extend the usability of irregular water inputs. Banking rainwater (through techniques often summarized by the
epigram An epigram is a brief, interesting, memorable, and sometimes surprising or satirical statement. The word is derived from the Greek "inscription" from "to write on, to inscribe", and the literary device has been employed for over two mille ...
" slow it, spread it, sink it") is possible with site-appropriate techniques and as more water becomes "available for ecosystems...their capacity to perform their functions is improved." Furthermore, soil restoration is possible and would potentially open up more than of land in Africa for additional cultivation, which could in turn reduce deforestation for agricultural uses. Niger has implemented several of these techniques on a wide scale beginning in the 1980s and has recovered approximately of degraded land. Benefits of rainwater harvesting (especially on a community scale) include additional drinking water for animals, land reclamation opportunities, higher soil fertility, accelerated growth of timber for firewood, and reinforcement of a
virtuous cycle A vicious circle (or cycle) is a complex chain of events that reinforces itself through a feedback loop, with detrimental results. It is a system with no tendency toward equilibrium (social, economic, ecological, etc.), at least in the short r ...
pattern leading toward additional rainfall ( trees make rain). Any or all of the following techniques reduce water runoff and thus increase soil water storage, generally yielding about two to three times more growth than crops grown in the same regions/conditions under a more conventional system. One study found that appropriately managed Sahelian rainwater-harvesting techniques increased runoff retention up to 87 percent, doubled water infiltration rates, and extended the crop-growing season up to 20 days.


Bouli

A is a small-scale artificial pond dug "where there is convergence of runoff" at the midpoint or bottom of a slope. This water tends to last for two or even three months into the dry period after the monsoon. In addition to supplying additional water for livestock and vegetable gardens the ''bouli'' "can recreate an ecosystem favourable to the life of the fauna and the local flora, boosting recharge of water tables during droughts and allowing vegetation to grow even during the dry period." ''Bouli'' may be the most poorly studied of the rainwater harvesting techniques appropriate for the Sahel, as there are relatively few studies about the mechanics and benefits of this system.


Bunds

Mauritian farmers build weirs to trap windblown sand during the dry season and during the "infrequent rains" these weirs serve to minimize water runoff and maximize groundwater recharge; the stone rows of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger function by similar principles. Stone rows, typically called bunds, are a traditional and widely used means of land improvement in the Sahel. Laid out on contour, stone rows minimize soil erosion but also minimize rainwater runoff and offer favorable microclimates. Bunds not laid out in parallel with the natural contours of the land may result in "some gully formation during rainy periods." Bunds can also be made of earth, which was the original practice that preceded the use of stone. Bunds may be laid out up to 30 meters apart and may themselves be planted with indigenous vegetation such as ''
Andropogon gayanus ''Andropogon gayanus''. commonly known as gamba grass, Rhodesian blue grass, tambuki grass, and other names, is a species of grass native to most of the tropical and subtropical savannas of Africa. History and naming ''Andropogon gayanus'' was ...
'' or ''
Piliostigma reticulatum ''Piliostigma reticulatum'' is a legume in the Cercidoideae subfamily. It occurs throughout western tropical Africa to Ethiopia. The species has been shown to be useful as an intercrop for crops such as millet in the Sahel. Description A pere ...
''. Both earth and stone bunds are prone to material deterioration over time and demand periodic maintenance; as a general rule, the more stones used the more stable the row. ''Projet d’aménagement des terroirs et conservation des eaux'' (PATECORE) popularized the three-stone system for building more durable, animal-disturbance-resistant stone rows, in which one large stone is placed atop three smaller stones.


Demi-lunes, or half-moons

Half-moons, which are known as through much of the Sahel because of the French colonial influence on regional languages, are a widely used traditional form of semi-circular planting pit. Half-moons are formed by digging a hole up to four meters across but somewhat shallower in depth, and "placing the removed earth on the downhill side." Half-moons are particularly useful for remediating the more or less impermeable ''glacis'' soils. These edged planting pits capture and hold organic matter and moisture. The accumulated detritus in turn attracts termites and other invertebrates whose actions create passages and pores in the organic matter, building
humus In classical soil science, humus is the dark organic matter in soil that is formed by the decomposition of plant and animal matter. It is a kind of soil organic matter. It is rich in nutrients and retains moisture in the soil. Humus is the Lati ...
, and permitting better water infiltration. Half-moons have been shown to reduce the risk of crop failure and increase agricultural productivity, especially with the use of "complementary inputs" such as animal manures. Half-moons, however, are extremely labor-intensive: "constructing just one takes several hours" and the preparation of the planting areas must be done during the dry season when the ground is very hard and the heat may be severe. According to one account based on interviews with Sahelian farm families, "preparation of ne hectare of ''demi-lunes''amounts to two to four person-months of work, and yearly maintenance of approximately one-person month is required."


Zaï, or tassa

A ''zaï'' is a "water pocket" and is another indigenous planting method, developed in the
Yatenga Yatenga is one of the provinces of Burkina Faso, located in the Nord Region of the country. In modern Yatenga, the most prominent city is Ouahigouya (also known as Waiguya). This city served as the capital of the kingdom of Yatenga, a powerful kin ...
. The word comes from the Moré language, and means something like "getting up early and hurrying out to prepare the soil" or even "breaking and fragmenting the soil crust before sowing." ''Tassa'' is the
Hausa language Hausa (; /; Ajami: ) is a Chadic language spoken by the Hausa people in the northern half of Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Benin and Togo, and the southern half of Niger, Chad and Sudan, with significant minorities in Ivory Coast. Hausa is a member ...
word for this concept. A similar practice in the Yako region is called ''guendo''. Similar to half-moons, but smaller, ''zaï'' are usually 24 to 40 cm wide, 10 to 25 cm deep, spaced about 40 cm apart in a grid across the field. ''Zaï'' are usually established with "two handfuls" of organic matter in the form of animal manure, crop residues, or a
composted Compost is a mixture of ingredients used as plant fertilizer and to improve soil's physical, chemical and biological properties. It is commonly prepared by decomposing plant, food waste, recycling organic materials and manure. The resulting m ...
combination of the two. These pits were traditionally used on a small scale to remediate degraded '' zipélé'' lands but are now being used on much larger plots. ''Zaï'' are best-suited for use in areas that see "
isohyet A contour line (also isoline, isopleth, or isarithm) of a function of two variables is a curve along which the function has a constant value, so that the curve joins points of equal value. It is a plane section of the three-dimensional graph ...
s of 300 and 800 mm rainfall." ''Zaï'' have been shows to increase yields between 2.5 and 20 times normal, "depending on the crop." As with half-moons, the major drawback of ''zaï'' is in the hundreds of man-hours that are necessary to build them. Families must either have a large number of fit and able-bodied workers, or "pay for the services of the young people's association."


Other techniques

Other beneficial and successful practices in the Sahel include: *Living
hedgerow A hedge or hedgerow is a line of closely spaced shrubs and sometimes trees, planted and trained to form a barrier or to mark the boundary of an area, such as between neighbouring properties. Hedges that are used to separate a road from adjoini ...
s * Straw mulching * Coppicing/ pollarding rather than cutting down trees wholesale, ideally leaving two or three shoots for regrowth * Paddock systems for grazing animals * Tied ridges, a planting system that looks a Belgian waffle


Obstacles to implementation

Widespread adoption of rainwater harvesting techniques in the Sahel is so far limited by a number of factors including a high upfront cost for labor. The massive quantity and ''weight'' of stones needed to establish bunds is often prohibitive. It is estimated that of rock are needed to establish stone rows for just one hectare of arable land. Other limits include lack of knowledge about these techniques and the absence of training programs. In the words of one development analyst, " agricultural water management strategies have been over-studied, over-promoted, and over-funded. However, despite the efforts of numerous projects, water scarcity still limits agricultural production of most of the smallholder crop-livestock farmers of the basin and cereal yields are still lying far below their potential." One study found that village training programs, "a low-cost policy intervention," were highly effective in increasing uptake of rainwater harvesting techniques.


Additional images


See also

* Effects of climate change on agriculture * Farmer-managed natural regeneration *
Contour trenching Contour trenching is an agricultural technique that can be easily applied in arid sub-Sahara areas to allow for water, and soil conservation, and to increase agricultural production. Between two trenches crops can benefit during the growing se ...
* Spreading ground *
Anthrosol An anthrosol (or anthropogenic soil) in the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB) is a type of soil that has been formed or heavily modified due to long-term human activity, such as from irrigation, addition of organic waste or wet-field cul ...
** ** '' Terra preta'' * *
Oasification In hydrology, oasification is the antonym to desertification by soil erosion. This technique has limited application and is normally considered for much smaller areas than those threatened by desertification. To help the oasification process, e ...
*
Afforestation Afforestation is the establishment of a forest or stand of trees (forestation) in an area where there was no previous tree cover. Many government and non-governmental organizations directly engage in afforestation programs to create forests a ...
* Water scarcity in Africa *
Water conflict in the Middle East and North Africa Water conflict in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) primarily deals with three major river basins: the Jordan River Basin, the Tigris-Euphrates River Basin, and the Nile River Basin. The MENA region covers roughly 11.1 million square km. There ...
*
Environmental issues in Africa Environmental issues can be defined as the harmful effects of any human activity on the environment. African environmental issues are caused by anthropogenic effects on the African natural environment and have major impacts on humans and nearly a ...


Sources


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * *


Further reading

* * * & {{Cite book , title=Rainwater harvesting for drylands and beyond , volume=2: Water-harvesting earthworks , date=2020 , isbn=978-0-9772464-4-1 , edition=2nd , publisher=Rainsource Press , location=Tucson, Arizona , oclc=1114277588 , lccn=2019904892 Agriculture in Africa Climate change adaptation Climate change in Africa Environment of Africa Environmental education Food security Irrigation Permaculture concepts
Sahel The Sahel (; ar, ساحل ' , "coast, shore") is a region in North Africa. It is defined as the ecoclimatic and biogeographic realm of transition between the Sahara to the north and the Sudanian savanna to the south. Having a hot semi-arid c ...
Sahel Sustainable agriculture Water conservation Water in Africa Water supply