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    Sharing Lessons Learned Protects Great Rivers

       
    April 2007 - Flowing through 
    eight countries of southern Africa, the Zambezi River faces 
    competing demands for water from agriculture, power 
    generation, industrial and domestic users as well as wildlife 
    and tourism. Rivers in China, Brazil and the United States 
    face similar demands despite their differing geography, so 
    river managers are avoiding mistakes by sharing lessons 
    learned through the Nature Conservancy's Great Rivers 
    Partnership. 
    The fourth largest river in Africa, the Zambezi arises on the 
    Central African Plateau in the Kalene Hills of northwestern 
    Zambia and winds 1,500 miles (2,414 kilometers) before it 
    widenvironment news into a delta in Mozambique and pours into
     the Indian 
    Ocean. 
    The river basin supports a population of more than 42 million 
    people and many endangered wildlife species. The river creates 
    the largest sheet of falling water in the world at Victoria 
    Falls, shared by Zimbabwe and Zambia. The Zambezi River flows
     over a precipice to form Victoria 
    Falls. 
    Rapid human settlement, incompatible agricultural practices, 
    water pollution, alteration of natural flooding and flow 
    patterns, poaching, unmanaged fire, unsustainable fishing, 
    deforestation, invasive vegetation and the introduction of 
    non-native fish from aquaculture operations, have all taken a 
    toll on the Zambezi's ecological health. 
    To help manage and protect the Zambezi, the African Wildlife 
    Foundation and The Nature Conservancy in March began working 
    together under the umbrella of the Conservancy's Great Rivers 
    Partnership. 
    "The Nature Conservancy as an organization has not had a 
    presence in Africa," Michael Reuter, director of the 
    Conservancy's Great Rivers Partnership told environment news.
     "As we looked 
    at our global conservation mission and areas where we needed 
    to begin investing, we concluded that Africa is really 
    important for biodiversity and human livelihoods." 
    With this partnership, the conservationists are bringing 
    effective practices from other river systems around the world 
    to Africa to inform management of the Zambezi. 
    In addition to the Zambezi, the Great Rivers Partnership is 
    working to advance conservation of the Yangtze River in China, 
    the Paraguay and Parana rivers in Brazil and the Mississippi 
    River in the United States. 
    Reuter said that the Nature Conservancy invited 10 members of 
    Zambezi River Authority to attend the Second Yangtze Forum 
    that concluded Tuesday in Changsha, China. 
    Participants at the Second Yangtze Forum in Changsha, China 
    April 15-17. 
    "We are cosponsoring the Yangtze River Forum, a bi-annual 
    event, with the government of China and a host of NGO and 
    governmental partners, to share lessons learned among these 
    rivers," Reuter said. 
    The first annual health report on the Yangtze River, released 
    at the Forum Tuesday, shows that billions of tons of waste 
    dumped into river are taking a massive toll on its aquatic 
    life. The Yangtze River Conservation and Development Report 
    2007 says that China's longest waterway is suffering from 
    natural disasters, deterioration of water quality and loss of 
    biodiversity. 
    Last year, more than 26 billion tons of wastewater was pumped 
    into the Yangtze, which runs through 11 provinces and 
    municipalities. 
    The polluted Yangtze River at Fuling, a town at the confluence 
    of the Yangtze and Wu rivers. 
    China's first comprehensive study of the river said that about 
    one-tenth of the 6,380 kilometer (3,964 miles) main stream is 
    in critical condition. 
    Experts who wrote the report said the river is "irreversibly" 
    damaged. 
    Pollution, damming and heavy traffic have brought rare Yangtze 
    species such as the white-flag dolphin to the verge of 
    extinction and common species such as the carp are gasping for 
    survival, the report said. 
    The Zambezi River is not yet subject to such overuse and 
    pollution, and African Wildlife Foundation staffer Jimmiel 
    Mandima is determined to environment newsure that the African
     River remains 
    healthier. 
    "Maintaining the Zambezi River's role as a functional lifeline 
    from an economic and ecological standpoint is the overall 
    vision for this initiative," said Jimmiel Mandima, director 
    for the African Wildlife Foundation's Zambezi Heartland 
    program. 
    "Cross-site exchanges and lessons learned from other great 
    rivers should come to bear and contribute to the formulation 
    of an appropriate integrated water resources management 
    strategy that fosters sustainable freshwater conservation," 
    Mandima said. 
    "Drought has been a regional challenge especially in 
    agricultural production, where there is a tendency for a 
    growing population to create greater pressure on river 
    systems, including the Zambezi," Mandima told environment news
     from Kariba, 
    Zimbabwe, a Zambezi River town. "Water taking is controlled to 
    some extent, but this needs to be expanded," he said. 
    A fisheries ecologist by profession, Mandima said, "We have 
    been able to solicit the cooperation of different countries in 
    a aquatic resources working group. These members join resource 
    monitoring activities and with capacity building we expect 
    these institutions to conduct monitoring of the river.
     Elephants drink at a natural waterhole on the Zambezi River.
     Wildife is able to get the water they need from the Zambezi, 
    says Mandima. The whole Zambezi basin has the "big five" 
    animals of Africa - lions, leopards, elephants, rhinos, and 
    the African cape buffalo - as well as a good number of 
    aquatics like hippos, crocodiles and rich fish resources, 
    Mandima says. 
    The Zambezi basin supports more than 250 species of fish such 
    as the tigerfish and the great Vundu catfish. Hundreds of bird 
    species inhabit the basin, including the snake eagle, African 
    fish eagle and the Marabu stork. The Zambezi and its 
    tributaries also provide habitat for zebras, monkeys, baboons, 
    crocodiles, and monitor lizards. 
    The world's largest elephant population, close to 200,000 
    elepants strong, is found in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Botswana 
    where they rely on the Zambezi as a major lifeline. 
    Until recently the Zambezi River, with its tributaries, swamps 
    and springs, has provided enough water for the elephant herds, 
    but due to recurrent droughts in Zimbabwe, Mandima says 
    wildlife authorities have had to supplement the river with 
    artificial watering holes. 
    Baby elephant in the Zambezi 
    "There are intentions to do more of this in other countries to 
    minimize congestions of elephants that can result in damage to 
    other resources," he said. 
    There are two main sources of hydroelectric power on the river 
    - the Kariba Dam, which provides power to Zambia and Zimbabwe 
    and the Cahora Bassa Dam in Mozambique which provides power to 
    South Africa. There is also a smaller power station at 
    Victoria Falls. 
    Mandima says plans to build more dams are still on the drawing 
    board, although the Southern Africa Power Pool recognizes a 
    growing deficit in power as compared to development and 
    industrialization planned for the Zambezi Basin. 
    The government of Mozambique says it plans to build more dams 
    to avert future flooding of the Zambezi River like the floods 
    that devastated the country in February, affecting more than 
    87,000 people. Despite the destruction, local non-governmental 
    organizations have criticized the government for its dam 
    plans, claiming the dams would displace thousands of people 
    and flood fertile food producing areas. 
    In its case study of the Kariba Dam in 2000, the World 
    Commission on Dams found that the downstream impacts extend 
    all the way to the Indian Ocean. 
    One of the first large dams in Africa, the Kariba dam on the 
    Zambezi River was built in 1959. 
    The seasonal high and low floods do not occur as they did 
    before Kariba, the Commission said. "The delta floodplain 
    ecology has been negatively affected. Shrimp catches have 
    decreased, floodplains have been invaded by upland vegetation 
    because of the absence of annual flooding, mangrove are dying 
    off because of poor flooding of coastal areas, productivity of 
    artesianal fisheries in the delta area has decreased, and 
    wildlife populations in the delta have been negatively 
    impacted." 
    Mandima says more dams would impact the flow regime of the 
    Zambezi, but from the shared perspective anything that happens 
    damming the Zambezi River requires the endorsement of all 
    eight countries, it requires agreement at the regional 
    economic secretariat level, to the extent that by the time any 
    dam is funded, he said, the consequences will be well 
    understood. 
    The Zambezi River Basin is shown in white on this map of 
    southern Africa. (Map courtesy Wikimedia, created from public 
    domain maps at the University of Texas.)
    "Floods on the Zambezi River tend to be long-lasting, and 
    beneficial when they spread over large flood plains," says 
    Reuter. "When we have these dams and flow alterations, 
    productivity declines steeply. The Conservancy will work with 
    the African Wildlife Foundation and the Zambezi River 
    Authority and others to improve these outcomes." 
    The African Wildlife Foundation's participation in the Great 
    Rivers Partnership will provide technical and financial 
    support to help river stakeholders obtain the latest 
    scientific information on which to base decisions, says 
    Reuter. 
    "Jimmiel lacks good baseline information on the increase and 
    decrease of species and impacts on the river," he said. "One 
    of the things we felt is really important is that Great Rivers 
    Partnership will work with the African Wildlife Foundation and 
    local authorities to provide that baseline information." 
    "We can share information among these river systems so we 
    don't have to make the same mistakes." 
    The Nature Conservancy's Great Rivers Partnership is online 
    at: http://www.nature.org/wherewework/greatrivers/ 
    







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