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A watershed approach to upgrade rainfed agriculture in water scarce regions through Water System Innovations: an integrated research initiative on water for food and rural livelihoods in balance with ecosystem functions

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present an integrated approach to agricultural water management, analysing the interactions between the adoption and participatory adaptation of water system innovations (such as water harvesting, drip irrigation, conservation farming, etc.), increased water use in agriculture and water flows to sustain ecological functions that deliver critical ecosystem services to humans.
Abstract
The challenge of producing food for a rapidly increasing population in semi-arid agro-ecosystems in Southern Africa is daunting. More food necessarily means more consumptive use of so-called green water flow (vapour flow sustaining crop growth). Every increase in food production upstream in a watershed will impact on water user and using systems downstream. Intensifying agriculture has in the past often been carried out with negative side effects in terms of land and water degradation. Water legislation is increasingly incorporating the requirement to safeguard a water reserve to sustain instream ecology. To address the challenges of increasing food production, improving rural livelihoods, while safeguarding critical ecological functions, a research programme has recently been launched on “Smallholder System Innovations in Integrated Watershed Management” (SSI). The programme takes an integrated approach to agricultural water management, analysing the interactions between the adoption and participatory adaptation of water system innovations (such as water harvesting, drip irrigation, conservation farming, etc.), increased water use in agriculture and water flows to sustain ecological functions that deliver critical ecosystem services to humans. The research is carried out in the Pangani Basin in Tanzania and the Thukela Basin in South Africa. A nested scale approach is adopted, which will enable the analysis of scale interactions between water management at the farm level, and cascading hydrological impacts at watershed and basin scale. This paper describes the integrated research approach of the SSI programme, and indicates areas of potential to upgrade rainfed agriculture in water scarcity-prone agro-ecosystems while securing water for downstream use.

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Rural sustainability under threat in Zimbabwe - Simulation of future land use/cover changes in the Bindura district based on the Markov-cellular automata model

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a Markov-cellular automata model that integrates satellite-derived land use/cover maps and a cellular automata spatial filter to simulate future land use and cover changes up to 2030.
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Rainwater harvesting and management in rainfed agricultural systems in sub-Saharan Africa - A review

TL;DR: In this article, rainwater harvesting and management (RWHM) technologies hold a significant potential for improving rainwater-use efficiency and sustaining rainfed agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa.
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Food consumption patterns and their effect on water requirement in China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper quantified how food consumption patterns influence water requirements in China and proposed three scenarios to project future TWRF, representing low, medium, and high levels of modernization (S1, S2, and S3, respectively).
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of in situ rainwater harvesting (RWH) practices modifying landscape functions in African drylands.

TL;DR: In situ rainwater harvesting (RWH) belongs to the promising practices to support sustainable development in sub-Saharan Africa facing climate change impacts, but appropriate indicators for their long-term sustainability are missing as discussed by the authors.
References
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Assessment of soil nutrient depletion in sub-Saharan Africa: 1983-2000.

TL;DR: Stoorvogel et al. as discussed by the authors developed a methodology to assess the state of soil nutrient depletion under agriculture in Sub-Saharan Africa for 1983 and the year 2000, which is described with five input and five output factors, which result in a nutrient loss rate.
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Disentangling biodiversity effects on ecosystem functioning: deriving solutions to a seemingly insurmountable problem

TL;DR: It is suggested that distinguishing between functional response traits and functional effect traits both in combinatorial manipulations of biodiversity and in descriptive studies of BEF could markedly improve the power of such studies.
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Conceptualization and scale in hydrology

V. Klemeš
- 01 Aug 1983 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the levels of scale at which a meaningful conceptualization of physical processes is possible are not arbitrary and their range is not continuous and that the search for an appropriate level of conceptualization can proceed either upward or downward along the hierarchy of scales.
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Water Accounting to Assess Use and Productivity of Water

TL;DR: In this paper, a methodology is demonstrated to account for the use and productivity of water resources, which is applicable to different levels of analysis ranging from a micro level such as a household, to a macro level such a complete water basin.
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