This paper deals with updated results coming from hydrogeological studies carried on the framework of the SECOSUD Phase II, called “Conservation and equitable use of biological diversity in the SADC region (Southern African Development Community), a project supported by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Afairs in the SADC, whose focus area includes South Africa Development Countries. The main goal of the SECOSUD Phase II Project is the defnition and implementation of scenarios for sustainable development, aimed at an equitable conservation of biodiversity resources and, as a consequence of this target, the hydrogeological characterization, with the groundwater recharge assessment, of this area and its bufer zone. Limpopo National Park is one of the jewels in the crown of Mozambique’s protected areas. As a matter of fact, sustaining the conservation of biodiversity, due to its complexity and multiple drivers, which stress it, is on frst a matter of water environment assessment, as most ecosystems are highly dependent on the hydrological cycle and groundwater availability. After gathering regional and local geological data, which let us set up a detailed geological map of the area under study, pointing out the main outcropping geological units, with their main hydrogeological properties, the methodological approach adopted has been to assess the potential infltration, applying the Inverse Hydrogeological Budget Technique, performed for the focus area. Because of the lack of meteorological data referred to Limpopo National Park, it has been applied a spatial distribution of precipitation measurements, collected in many gauge stations, located in the Kruger National Park during the last 54 years, which represent an interesting rainfall historical series. The target of the study has been to assess a trend of meteorological data with the aim of understanding how precipitations could afect groundwater recharge, and their infuence on groundwater availability. The estimation of groundwater recharge is the tool for suggesting better water management in the area, aimed to preserve as much biodiversity as people living in the bufer zone.
Limpopo National Park (Mozambico): groundwater assessment as a tool for a sustainable management of the area / Sappa, G.; Vitale, S.; Ferranti, F.; Barbieri, M.. - In: ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES. - ISSN 1866-6299. - 82:20(2023). [10.1007/s12665-023-11126-4]
Limpopo National Park (Mozambico): groundwater assessment as a tool for a sustainable management of the area
Sappa G.
Primo
;Barbieri M.Ultimo
2023
Abstract
This paper deals with updated results coming from hydrogeological studies carried on the framework of the SECOSUD Phase II, called “Conservation and equitable use of biological diversity in the SADC region (Southern African Development Community), a project supported by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Afairs in the SADC, whose focus area includes South Africa Development Countries. The main goal of the SECOSUD Phase II Project is the defnition and implementation of scenarios for sustainable development, aimed at an equitable conservation of biodiversity resources and, as a consequence of this target, the hydrogeological characterization, with the groundwater recharge assessment, of this area and its bufer zone. Limpopo National Park is one of the jewels in the crown of Mozambique’s protected areas. As a matter of fact, sustaining the conservation of biodiversity, due to its complexity and multiple drivers, which stress it, is on frst a matter of water environment assessment, as most ecosystems are highly dependent on the hydrological cycle and groundwater availability. After gathering regional and local geological data, which let us set up a detailed geological map of the area under study, pointing out the main outcropping geological units, with their main hydrogeological properties, the methodological approach adopted has been to assess the potential infltration, applying the Inverse Hydrogeological Budget Technique, performed for the focus area. Because of the lack of meteorological data referred to Limpopo National Park, it has been applied a spatial distribution of precipitation measurements, collected in many gauge stations, located in the Kruger National Park during the last 54 years, which represent an interesting rainfall historical series. The target of the study has been to assess a trend of meteorological data with the aim of understanding how precipitations could afect groundwater recharge, and their infuence on groundwater availability. The estimation of groundwater recharge is the tool for suggesting better water management in the area, aimed to preserve as much biodiversity as people living in the bufer zone.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Sappa_Limpopo-national-park_2023.pdf
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