Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]

The Ethiopian government has declared the Lake Tana - Beles region to be a growth corridor and irrigation development is one of the priorities. Since the dry season river flow is limited, groundwater has the greatest potential for increasing irrigation in the near future. The main drawback is lack o...

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Main Authors: Yilak, Debebe L., Tilahun, Seifu A., Schmitter, Petra S., Nakawuka, Prossie, Enku, T., Kassawmar, N. T., Steenhuis, Tammo S.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75724
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author Yilak, Debebe L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Nakawuka, Prossie
Enku, T.
Kassawmar, N. T.
Steenhuis, Tammo S.
author_browse Enku, T.
Kassawmar, N. T.
Nakawuka, Prossie
Schmitter, Petra S.
Steenhuis, Tammo S.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
Yilak, Debebe L.
author_facet Yilak, Debebe L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Nakawuka, Prossie
Enku, T.
Kassawmar, N. T.
Steenhuis, Tammo S.
author_sort Yilak, Debebe L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Ethiopian government has declared the Lake Tana - Beles region to be a growth corridor and irrigation development is one of the priorities. Since the dry season river flow is limited, groundwater has the greatest potential for increasing irrigation in the near future. The main drawback is lack of information on sustainable groundwater use and specifically the ground water potential. Therefore the objective of this research is to calculate the annual groundwater recharge. The study was conducted in Robit-Bata, an experimental watershed of 911 ha, located at the south-eastern edge of Lake Tana. Farmers have excavated more than 300 hand dug wells for irrigation use from which, we used 50 wells for water table fluctuation observations for one year starting from April, 2014. Daily Precipitation was recorded for the same period. The annual recharge was estimated using the water – level fluctuation method. Specific yield was defined as the difference of porosity and field capacity of the subsurface formation. The annual average areal groundwater recharge was 640 mm/year, which is 41% of the rainfall and ranged from 50mm to 390mm per week for the various locations in the watershed. The greatest recharge amounts were found in the plains at the foot of the hills and river course areas consisting mostly weathered basalt rock. At those locations the groundwater rose steadily during the rainy monsoon phase. Smaller amount of recharge occurred both near the top of the hills with tough rock formation and in the, flat areas near to stream with sandy and clay deposits and groundwater at, shallow well depth. Our study indicates that the current use of the groundwater seems sustainable. Further research is required for optimized utilization of the limited groundwater resources for irrigation development to meet the food security of the community.
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spelling CGSpace757242025-10-14T15:09:09Z Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only] Yilak, Debebe L. Tilahun, Seifu A. Schmitter, Petra S. Nakawuka, Prossie Enku, T. Kassawmar, N. T. Steenhuis, Tammo S. agriculture groundwater groundwater recharge water levels water use highlands irrigation water watersheds sustainability case studies The Ethiopian government has declared the Lake Tana - Beles region to be a growth corridor and irrigation development is one of the priorities. Since the dry season river flow is limited, groundwater has the greatest potential for increasing irrigation in the near future. The main drawback is lack of information on sustainable groundwater use and specifically the ground water potential. Therefore the objective of this research is to calculate the annual groundwater recharge. The study was conducted in Robit-Bata, an experimental watershed of 911 ha, located at the south-eastern edge of Lake Tana. Farmers have excavated more than 300 hand dug wells for irrigation use from which, we used 50 wells for water table fluctuation observations for one year starting from April, 2014. Daily Precipitation was recorded for the same period. The annual recharge was estimated using the water – level fluctuation method. Specific yield was defined as the difference of porosity and field capacity of the subsurface formation. The annual average areal groundwater recharge was 640 mm/year, which is 41% of the rainfall and ranged from 50mm to 390mm per week for the various locations in the watershed. The greatest recharge amounts were found in the plains at the foot of the hills and river course areas consisting mostly weathered basalt rock. At those locations the groundwater rose steadily during the rainy monsoon phase. Smaller amount of recharge occurred both near the top of the hills with tough rock formation and in the, flat areas near to stream with sandy and clay deposits and groundwater at, shallow well depth. Our study indicates that the current use of the groundwater seems sustainable. Further research is required for optimized utilization of the limited groundwater resources for irrigation development to meet the food security of the community. 2015 2016-06-14T10:48:44Z 2016-06-14T10:48:44Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75724 en Limited Access Yilak, D. L.; Tilahun, S. A.; Schmitter, Petra; Nakawuka, Prossie; Enku, T.; Kassawmar, N. T.; Steenhuis, T. S. 2015. Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only] Paper presented at the 10th Alexander von Humboldt Conference 2015 on Water-Food-Energy River and Society in the Tropics. EGU Topical Conference Series, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 18-20 November 2015. 2p.
spellingShingle agriculture
groundwater
groundwater recharge
water levels
water use
highlands
irrigation water
watersheds
sustainability
case studies
Yilak, Debebe L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
Schmitter, Petra S.
Nakawuka, Prossie
Enku, T.
Kassawmar, N. T.
Steenhuis, Tammo S.
Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title_full Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title_fullStr Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title_full_unstemmed Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title_short Determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in Ethiopian Highlands [Abstract only]
title_sort determining the groundwater potential for agricultural use in ethiopian highlands abstract only
topic agriculture
groundwater
groundwater recharge
water levels
water use
highlands
irrigation water
watersheds
sustainability
case studies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75724
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