3 research outputs found
Estimation of groundwater recharge due to conservation agriculture practice
A review of groundwater recharge studies in Sub-Saharan Africa demonstrates a
strong relationship between rainfall and recharge, but with considerable uncertainty
due to significant impact of land cover and in particular land clearing and agriculture.
This research project focuses on impacts of conservation agriculture (CA) practice
on groundwater recharge. Conservation agriculture is being encouraged by
governments over conventional methods in the understanding that CA practices
such as minimum tillage, retention of crop residue and crop diversity improves
crop resilience under dry conditions. However, there has been little consideration
of the direct impact of such practices on groundwater. In this study, we setup
three experimental sites in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi to quantify recharge
patterns under CA in comparison to conventional farming practice. Each site will be
instrumented with soil moisture monitoring probes, a weather station, monitoring
boreholes and electrical-resistivity tomography (ERT) equipment. Environmental
isotopes and tracers (such as CFCs and SF6) and water chemistry will also be
analysed. The monitoring will help to elucidate processes in the unsaturated zone
around the plant root zone through to groundwater. Ultimately, this will help
understand groundwater dynamics and fractioning below surface of CA field