Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali

Background Excessive rainwater during the rainy season and lack of water in the dry season have been challenging the agricultural productivity and food security for rural communities in southern Mali. Various soil and water conservation practices were implemented in the past to improve crop yields a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zemadim, Birhanu, Tabo, Ramadjita
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Springer 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75643
_version_ 1855542548937834496
author Zemadim, Birhanu
Tabo, Ramadjita
author_browse Tabo, Ramadjita
Zemadim, Birhanu
author_facet Zemadim, Birhanu
Tabo, Ramadjita
author_sort Zemadim, Birhanu
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background Excessive rainwater during the rainy season and lack of water in the dry season have been challenging the agricultural productivity and food security for rural communities in southern Mali. Various soil and water conservation practices were implemented in the past to improve crop yields and income, and reverse the effect of land degradation. However, none of these efforts looked into the potential use of shallow wells at a spatial scale to improve the agricultural productivity and hence the food security in the region. Results In total 484 shallow wells were geo-referenced, mapped and studied in two districts, Bougouni and Koutiala, in southern Mali to understand the dynamics of groundwater recharge and relationship with rainfall in different seasons. The study found out that shallow wells were mainly utilized for household and livestock water consumption and not for agricultural water use. Well construction history followed the trend of the severe drought that hit the Sahel in the years of the 1970s and 1980s. Majority of wells (87 % in Bougouni and 84 % in Koutiala) were constructed after the drought period with significant variation of construction in the two districts (p value 0.032). Well depths ranged from 1 to 150 m, with the majority of wells (64 %) within the depth range of 6.5–14.5 m (p value 0.043). During the dry season water was available in the majority of wells (73 %) at a depth range from 5.5 to 15.5 m (p value 0.996). In the rainy season on average 84 % of wells in Bougouni and 94 % of wells in Koutiala experience water level rise within the range of 0.5–10.5 m (p value 0.423/Bougouni and 0.991/Koutiala). In few of the studied villages shallow wells were found to be fast recharging, thus enabling farmers to buffer the negative effects of drought conditions. Conclusion Shallow wells are important sources of water in rural Mali. The wells have adequate recharging capacity during the rainy season and insignificant water level variation during the dry season. Though accessing water from shallow wells was labour-intensive and mostly done by women and the youth, water is available within an average depth ranging from 5.5 to 15.5 m from most studied wells. The issue of water scarcity in different seasons was thus attributed to accessibility due to the lack of appropriate water lifting mechanisms. Groundwater was an untapped resource in Mali, and we suggest groundwater management needs to be given consideration along with other management practices in the changing climate condition to improve the agricultural productivity and food security.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace75643
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace756432024-05-01T08:20:03Z Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali Zemadim, Birhanu Tabo, Ramadjita water food security Background Excessive rainwater during the rainy season and lack of water in the dry season have been challenging the agricultural productivity and food security for rural communities in southern Mali. Various soil and water conservation practices were implemented in the past to improve crop yields and income, and reverse the effect of land degradation. However, none of these efforts looked into the potential use of shallow wells at a spatial scale to improve the agricultural productivity and hence the food security in the region. Results In total 484 shallow wells were geo-referenced, mapped and studied in two districts, Bougouni and Koutiala, in southern Mali to understand the dynamics of groundwater recharge and relationship with rainfall in different seasons. The study found out that shallow wells were mainly utilized for household and livestock water consumption and not for agricultural water use. Well construction history followed the trend of the severe drought that hit the Sahel in the years of the 1970s and 1980s. Majority of wells (87 % in Bougouni and 84 % in Koutiala) were constructed after the drought period with significant variation of construction in the two districts (p value 0.032). Well depths ranged from 1 to 150 m, with the majority of wells (64 %) within the depth range of 6.5–14.5 m (p value 0.043). During the dry season water was available in the majority of wells (73 %) at a depth range from 5.5 to 15.5 m (p value 0.996). In the rainy season on average 84 % of wells in Bougouni and 94 % of wells in Koutiala experience water level rise within the range of 0.5–10.5 m (p value 0.423/Bougouni and 0.991/Koutiala). In few of the studied villages shallow wells were found to be fast recharging, thus enabling farmers to buffer the negative effects of drought conditions. Conclusion Shallow wells are important sources of water in rural Mali. The wells have adequate recharging capacity during the rainy season and insignificant water level variation during the dry season. Though accessing water from shallow wells was labour-intensive and mostly done by women and the youth, water is available within an average depth ranging from 5.5 to 15.5 m from most studied wells. The issue of water scarcity in different seasons was thus attributed to accessibility due to the lack of appropriate water lifting mechanisms. Groundwater was an untapped resource in Mali, and we suggest groundwater management needs to be given consideration along with other management practices in the changing climate condition to improve the agricultural productivity and food security. 2016-12 2016-06-08T05:58:57Z 2016-06-08T05:58:57Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75643 en Open Access Springer Zemadim, B. and Tabo, R. 2016. Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali. Agriculture and Food Security 5:5.
spellingShingle water
food security
Zemadim, Birhanu
Tabo, Ramadjita
Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title_full Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title_fullStr Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title_full_unstemmed Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title_short Shallow wells, the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern Mali
title_sort shallow wells the untapped resource with a potential to improve agriculture and food security in southern mali
topic water
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75643
work_keys_str_mv AT zemadimbirhanu shallowwellstheuntappedresourcewithapotentialtoimproveagricultureandfoodsecurityinsouthernmali
AT taboramadjita shallowwellstheuntappedresourcewithapotentialtoimproveagricultureandfoodsecurityinsouthernmali