Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka

Wetlands are habitats with temporary or permanent accumulation of water. The degradation and loss of wetlands is more rapid than that for other ecosystems, and wetland-dependent biodiversity in many parts of the world is in continuing and accelerating decline. They have been confirmed to deliver a w...

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Autores principales: Atapattu, Sithara S., de Silva, Sanjiv, Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38210
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author Atapattu, Sithara S.
de Silva, Sanjiv
Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
author_browse Atapattu, Sithara S.
Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
de Silva, Sanjiv
author_facet Atapattu, Sithara S.
de Silva, Sanjiv
Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
author_sort Atapattu, Sithara S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Wetlands are habitats with temporary or permanent accumulation of water. The degradation and loss of wetlands is more rapid than that for other ecosystems, and wetland-dependent biodiversity in many parts of the world is in continuing and accelerating decline. They have been confirmed to deliver a wide range of critical and important services vital for human well-being. Therefore, it is clear that sound wetland management is now expected to not only consider conserving the ecological integrity of the ecosystem but also to pay specific attention to the well-being of local people, thereby contributing to poverty alleviation. Wetlands, both fresh and marine, have a multitude of benefits, in addition to environmental benefits, such as for agriculture, flood control, water purification, fisheries and recreation. For the maintenance and sustainability of wetlands the crucial requirement is water ? a resource that has multiple demands and competition. The main competitor for the water resource around the world is agriculture for food production, a basic requirement for human survival. Therefore, in a situation of wetlands versus food production, the balance tips towards food production without considering the adverse consequences to the wetlands or adequately appreciating the benefits from achieving a balance. This is where Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) should be adopted to facilitate this process and enable wetland management and agricultural management to fit into the picture along with the other multiple uses of water. Integrated Water Resource Management should be of considerable interest for Sri Lanka, being a country which has agriculture very high on the agenda. The country is also home to a range of wetlands including 103 distinct river basins and 42 lagoons, which support a multitude of functions and services to people. The relationship between agriculture and wetlands in Sri Lanka is complex. The proliferation of village level water storage structures (small tanks) has created an unusually large number of man-made wetland habitats that add significantly to the natural wetlands that are concentrated mainly in the coastal belt. The absence of an integrated approach to water resource development however, continues to erode natural wetland systems. Two major problems, which concern downstream fisheries and livelihoods, are high levels of agricultural pollution, especially through the excessive use of fertilizers, and modifications to the hydrology. The objective of this paper is to review the work of the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) on wetlands and agriculture in Sri Lanka, to look at the competing water demands between water for wetlands and water required for agriculture, keeping in mind the requirements for nature as well as the sustainability of livelihoods. The paper will address some impacts of agriculture on wetlands, the consequences for livelihoods and the benefits of adopting the IWRM approach, building a case on work carried out in the Kirindi Oya and Bundala wetlands.
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spelling CGSpace382102025-11-07T08:32:46Z Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka Atapattu, Sithara S. de Silva, Sanjiv Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali wetlands ecosystems habitats lagoons fisheries water resource management social aspects Wetlands are habitats with temporary or permanent accumulation of water. The degradation and loss of wetlands is more rapid than that for other ecosystems, and wetland-dependent biodiversity in many parts of the world is in continuing and accelerating decline. They have been confirmed to deliver a wide range of critical and important services vital for human well-being. Therefore, it is clear that sound wetland management is now expected to not only consider conserving the ecological integrity of the ecosystem but also to pay specific attention to the well-being of local people, thereby contributing to poverty alleviation. Wetlands, both fresh and marine, have a multitude of benefits, in addition to environmental benefits, such as for agriculture, flood control, water purification, fisheries and recreation. For the maintenance and sustainability of wetlands the crucial requirement is water ? a resource that has multiple demands and competition. The main competitor for the water resource around the world is agriculture for food production, a basic requirement for human survival. Therefore, in a situation of wetlands versus food production, the balance tips towards food production without considering the adverse consequences to the wetlands or adequately appreciating the benefits from achieving a balance. This is where Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) should be adopted to facilitate this process and enable wetland management and agricultural management to fit into the picture along with the other multiple uses of water. Integrated Water Resource Management should be of considerable interest for Sri Lanka, being a country which has agriculture very high on the agenda. The country is also home to a range of wetlands including 103 distinct river basins and 42 lagoons, which support a multitude of functions and services to people. The relationship between agriculture and wetlands in Sri Lanka is complex. The proliferation of village level water storage structures (small tanks) has created an unusually large number of man-made wetland habitats that add significantly to the natural wetlands that are concentrated mainly in the coastal belt. The absence of an integrated approach to water resource development however, continues to erode natural wetland systems. Two major problems, which concern downstream fisheries and livelihoods, are high levels of agricultural pollution, especially through the excessive use of fertilizers, and modifications to the hydrology. The objective of this paper is to review the work of the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) on wetlands and agriculture in Sri Lanka, to look at the competing water demands between water for wetlands and water required for agriculture, keeping in mind the requirements for nature as well as the sustainability of livelihoods. The paper will address some impacts of agriculture on wetlands, the consequences for livelihoods and the benefits of adopting the IWRM approach, building a case on work carried out in the Kirindi Oya and Bundala wetlands. 2010 2014-06-13T11:40:56Z 2014-06-13T11:40:56Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38210 en Open Access application/pdf Atapattu, Sithara S.; De Silva, Sanjiv; Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali. 2010. Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka. In Evans, Alexandra; Jinapala, K. (Eds). Proceedings of the National Conference on Water, Food Security and Climate Change in Sri Lanka, BMICH, Colombo, Sri Lanka, 9-11 June 2009. Vol. 2. Water quality, environment and climate change. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). pp.7-21.
spellingShingle wetlands
ecosystems
habitats
lagoons
fisheries
water resource management
social aspects
Atapattu, Sithara S.
de Silva, Sanjiv
Senaratna Sellamuttu, Sonali
Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title_full Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title_short Wetlands and agriculture: a case for integrated water resource management in Sri Lanka
title_sort wetlands and agriculture a case for integrated water resource management in sri lanka
topic wetlands
ecosystems
habitats
lagoons
fisheries
water resource management
social aspects
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38210
work_keys_str_mv AT atapattusitharas wetlandsandagricultureacaseforintegratedwaterresourcemanagementinsrilanka
AT desilvasanjiv wetlandsandagricultureacaseforintegratedwaterresourcemanagementinsrilanka
AT senaratnasellamuttusonali wetlandsandagricultureacaseforintegratedwaterresourcemanagementinsrilanka