Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa

Floodplains are particularly important in the semi-arid region of the Sub-Sahelian Africa. In this region, water governance is still being developed, often without adequate information and technical capacity for good, sustainable water resource management. However, water resources are being allocate...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: O'Brien, G.C., Dickens, Chris, Baker, C., Stassen, R., Weert, F. van
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110881
_version_ 1855529410921234432
author O'Brien, G.C.
Dickens, Chris
Baker, C.
Stassen, R.
Weert, F. van
author_browse Baker, C.
Dickens, Chris
O'Brien, G.C.
Stassen, R.
Weert, F. van
author_facet O'Brien, G.C.
Dickens, Chris
Baker, C.
Stassen, R.
Weert, F. van
author_sort O'Brien, G.C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Floodplains are particularly important in the semi-arid region of the Sub-Sahelian Africa. In this region, water governance is still being developed, often without adequate information and technical capacity for good, sustainable water resource management. However, water resources are being allocated for use with minimal sustainability considerations. Environmental flows (e-flows) include the quantity and timing of flows or water levels needed to meet the sustainable requirements of freshwater and estuarine ecosystems. Holistic regional scale e-flows linked to floodplain management can make a noticeable contribution to sustainable floodplain management. The Inner Niger Delta (IND) in Mali is an example of a vulnerable, socio-ecologically important floodplain in the Sahel region of North Africa that is being developed with little understanding of sustainability requirements. Although integrally linked to the Upper Niger River catchment, the IND sustains a million and half people within the region and exports food to surrounding areas. The flooding of the Delta is the engine of the socio-economic development as well as its ecological integrity. This paper aims to demonstrate the contribution that holistic regional e-flow assessment using the PROBFLO approach has to achieving floodplain sustainability. This can be achieved through the determining the e-flow requirements to maintain critical requirements of the ecosystems and associated services used by local vulnerable human communities for subsistence and describing the socio-ecological consequences of altered flows. These outcomes can contribute to the management of the IND. In this study, the socio-ecological consequences of altered flows have been evaluated by assessing the risk of alterations in the volume, duration, and timing of flows, to a number of ecological and social endpoints. Based on the risk posed to these endpoints by each scenario of change, an e-flow of 58% (26,685 million cubic meters (MCM) of water annually) was determined that would protect the ecosystem and maintain indicator components at a sustainable level. These e-flows also provide sustainable services to local communities including products for subsistence and limit any abnormal increases in diseases to the vulnerable African communities who live in the basin. Relative risk outputs for the development scenarios result in low-to-high-risk probabilities for most endpoints. The future development scenarios include insufficient flows to maintain sustainability during dry or low-flow periods with an increase in zero flow possibilities. Although unsuitable during the low-flow or dry periods, sufficient water is available through storage in the basin to meet the e-flows if these scenarios were considered for implementation. The IND is more vulnerable to changes in flows compared to the rivers upstream of the IND. The e-flow outcomes and consequences of altered flow scenarios has contributed to the management of vulnerable IND floodplains and the requirements and trade-off considerations to achieve sustainability.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace110881
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher MDPI
publisherStr MDPI
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1108812024-06-26T10:09:20Z Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa O'Brien, G.C. Dickens, Chris Baker, C. Stassen, R. Weert, F. van floodplains sustainability environmental flows water management ecosystem services livelihoods risk assessment water resources flooding social aspects ecological factors stakeholders communities habitats deltas rivers models uncertainty Floodplains are particularly important in the semi-arid region of the Sub-Sahelian Africa. In this region, water governance is still being developed, often without adequate information and technical capacity for good, sustainable water resource management. However, water resources are being allocated for use with minimal sustainability considerations. Environmental flows (e-flows) include the quantity and timing of flows or water levels needed to meet the sustainable requirements of freshwater and estuarine ecosystems. Holistic regional scale e-flows linked to floodplain management can make a noticeable contribution to sustainable floodplain management. The Inner Niger Delta (IND) in Mali is an example of a vulnerable, socio-ecologically important floodplain in the Sahel region of North Africa that is being developed with little understanding of sustainability requirements. Although integrally linked to the Upper Niger River catchment, the IND sustains a million and half people within the region and exports food to surrounding areas. The flooding of the Delta is the engine of the socio-economic development as well as its ecological integrity. This paper aims to demonstrate the contribution that holistic regional e-flow assessment using the PROBFLO approach has to achieving floodplain sustainability. This can be achieved through the determining the e-flow requirements to maintain critical requirements of the ecosystems and associated services used by local vulnerable human communities for subsistence and describing the socio-ecological consequences of altered flows. These outcomes can contribute to the management of the IND. In this study, the socio-ecological consequences of altered flows have been evaluated by assessing the risk of alterations in the volume, duration, and timing of flows, to a number of ecological and social endpoints. Based on the risk posed to these endpoints by each scenario of change, an e-flow of 58% (26,685 million cubic meters (MCM) of water annually) was determined that would protect the ecosystem and maintain indicator components at a sustainable level. These e-flows also provide sustainable services to local communities including products for subsistence and limit any abnormal increases in diseases to the vulnerable African communities who live in the basin. Relative risk outputs for the development scenarios result in low-to-high-risk probabilities for most endpoints. The future development scenarios include insufficient flows to maintain sustainability during dry or low-flow periods with an increase in zero flow possibilities. Although unsuitable during the low-flow or dry periods, sufficient water is available through storage in the basin to meet the e-flows if these scenarios were considered for implementation. The IND is more vulnerable to changes in flows compared to the rivers upstream of the IND. The e-flow outcomes and consequences of altered flow scenarios has contributed to the management of vulnerable IND floodplains and the requirements and trade-off considerations to achieve sustainability. 2020-12-17 2021-01-18T04:04:29Z 2021-01-18T04:04:29Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110881 en Open Access MDPI O’Brien, G. C.; Dickens, Chris; Baker, C.; Stassen, R.; van Weert, F. 2020. Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa. Sustainability, 12(24):10578. (Special issue: Durable Protections for Free-Flowing Rivers) [doi: https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410578]
spellingShingle floodplains
sustainability
environmental flows
water management
ecosystem services
livelihoods
risk assessment
water resources
flooding
social aspects
ecological factors
stakeholders
communities
habitats
deltas
rivers
models
uncertainty
O'Brien, G.C.
Dickens, Chris
Baker, C.
Stassen, R.
Weert, F. van
Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title_full Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title_fullStr Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title_short Sustainable floodplains: linking e-flows to floodplain management, ecosystems, and livelihoods in the Sahel of North Africa
title_sort sustainable floodplains linking e flows to floodplain management ecosystems and livelihoods in the sahel of north africa
topic floodplains
sustainability
environmental flows
water management
ecosystem services
livelihoods
risk assessment
water resources
flooding
social aspects
ecological factors
stakeholders
communities
habitats
deltas
rivers
models
uncertainty
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110881
work_keys_str_mv AT obriengc sustainablefloodplainslinkingeflowstofloodplainmanagementecosystemsandlivelihoodsinthesahelofnorthafrica
AT dickenschris sustainablefloodplainslinkingeflowstofloodplainmanagementecosystemsandlivelihoodsinthesahelofnorthafrica
AT bakerc sustainablefloodplainslinkingeflowstofloodplainmanagementecosystemsandlivelihoodsinthesahelofnorthafrica
AT stassenr sustainablefloodplainslinkingeflowstofloodplainmanagementecosystemsandlivelihoodsinthesahelofnorthafrica
AT weertfvan sustainablefloodplainslinkingeflowstofloodplainmanagementecosystemsandlivelihoodsinthesahelofnorthafrica