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    Soil erosion and sediment transport in Tanzania: Part I – sediment source tracing in three neighbouring river catchments

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    Date
    2021-12
    Author
    Wynants, Maarten
    Munishi, Linus
    Mtei, Kelvin
    Bodé, Samuel
    Patrick, Aloyce
    Taylor, Alex
    Gilvear, David
    Ndakidemi, Patrick
    Blake, William
    Boeckx, Pascal
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    Abstract
    Water bodies in Tanzania are experiencing increased siltation, which is threatening water quality, ecosystem health, and livelihood security in the region. This phenomenon is caused by increasing rates of upstream soil erosion and downstream sediment transport. However, a lack of knowledge on the contributions from different catchment zones, land-use types, and dominant erosion processes, to the transported sediment is undermining the mitigation of soil degradation at the source of the problem. In this context, complementary sediment source tracing techniques were applied in three Tanzanian river systems to further the understanding of the complex dynamics of soil erosion and sediment transport in the region. Analysis of the geochemical and biochemical fingerprints revealed a highly complex and variable soil system that could be grouped in distinct classes. These soil classes were unmixed against riverine sediment fingerprints using the Bayesian MixSIAR model, yielding proportionate source contributions for each catchment. This sediment source tracing indicated that hillslope erosion on the open rangelands and maize croplands in the mid-zone contributed over 75% of the transported sediment load in all three river systems during the sampling time-period. By integrating geochemical and biochemical fingerprints in sediment source tracing techniques, this study demonstrated links between land use, soil erosion and downstream sediment transport in Tanzania. This evidence can guide land managers in designing targeted interventions that safeguard both soil health and water quality
    URI
    https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.5217
    https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/1990
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