Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.

The Lake Victoria Basin (LVB) has become a focal point of development in Kenya, thereby attracting intensive multiple land use which has accelerated environmental degradation through siltation, water pollution and changes in flooding frequency. In addition, multi-sectoral uses of water have created competition among various water users without due regard to the need for ecological sustenance or the needs of downstream users. This pattern poses serious management problems. The LVB is used as a source of food, energy, drinking and irrigation water, shelter, transport and as a repository for human, agricultural and industrial waste. With the population of the riparian communities growing at rates among the highest in the world, the multiple activities in the lake basin have increasingly come into conflict. This has contributed to rendering the lake environmentally unstable. The lake ecosystem has undergone substantial, and to some observers alarming changes, which have accelerated over the last three decades. Massive blooms of algae have developed, and come increasingly to be dominated by the potentially toxic blue-green variety. The distance at which a white disc is visible from the surface, (a transparency index measuring algal abundance or secchi depth), has declined from 5 m in the early 1930s to 1 m or less for most of the year in the early 2000s. Water-borne diseases have increased in frequency. Water hyacinth, absent as late as 1989, has choked important waterways and landings. Overfishing and oxygen depletion at lower depths of the lake threaten the artisanal fisheries and biodiversity (over 200 indigenous species are believed to be facing possible extinction). Scientists advance two main hypotheses for these extensive changes. First, the introduction of the Nile perch as an exotic species some 30 years ago has altered the food web structure; second, nutrient inputs from the adjoining catchments are causing eutrophication. Thus, although the lake and its fishery show the evidence of the dramatic changes in the lake basin over the past century, the lake is not the source of the problem. The problem has arisen in the surrounding basins through polluting activities of humans activity and the demand for fish.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Angweya, R., Okungu, J., Abuodha, J.O.Z., Hecky, R.E.
Format: Book Section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Lake Victoria Environment Management Project (LVEMP) 2005
Subjects:Environmental impact, Man-induced effects, Pollution effects, Water quality, Overfishing,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/7138
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-71382021-05-19T06:15:33Z Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria. Lake Victoria Environment Report. Water Quality and Ecosystem Status: Kenya National Water Quality Synthesis Report. Initial draft. Angweya, R. Okungu, J. Abuodha, J.O.Z. Hecky, R.E. Abuodha, J.O.Z. Hecky, R.E. Environmental impact Man-induced effects Pollution effects Water quality Overfishing The Lake Victoria Basin (LVB) has become a focal point of development in Kenya, thereby attracting intensive multiple land use which has accelerated environmental degradation through siltation, water pollution and changes in flooding frequency. In addition, multi-sectoral uses of water have created competition among various water users without due regard to the need for ecological sustenance or the needs of downstream users. This pattern poses serious management problems. The LVB is used as a source of food, energy, drinking and irrigation water, shelter, transport and as a repository for human, agricultural and industrial waste. With the population of the riparian communities growing at rates among the highest in the world, the multiple activities in the lake basin have increasingly come into conflict. This has contributed to rendering the lake environmentally unstable. The lake ecosystem has undergone substantial, and to some observers alarming changes, which have accelerated over the last three decades. Massive blooms of algae have developed, and come increasingly to be dominated by the potentially toxic blue-green variety. The distance at which a white disc is visible from the surface, (a transparency index measuring algal abundance or secchi depth), has declined from 5 m in the early 1930s to 1 m or less for most of the year in the early 2000s. Water-borne diseases have increased in frequency. Water hyacinth, absent as late as 1989, has choked important waterways and landings. Overfishing and oxygen depletion at lower depths of the lake threaten the artisanal fisheries and biodiversity (over 200 indigenous species are believed to be facing possible extinction). Scientists advance two main hypotheses for these extensive changes. First, the introduction of the Nile perch as an exotic species some 30 years ago has altered the food web structure; second, nutrient inputs from the adjoining catchments are causing eutrophication. Thus, although the lake and its fishery show the evidence of the dramatic changes in the lake basin over the past century, the lake is not the source of the problem. The problem has arisen in the surrounding basins through polluting activities of humans activity and the demand for fish. Published 2015-08-10T21:56:40Z 2015-08-10T21:56:40Z 2005 Book Section Not Known http://hdl.handle.net/1834/7138 en pp.307-327 [Chapter 13] Kenya, Victoria L. Lake Victoria Environment Management Project (LVEMP) Kisumu, Kenya
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Environmental impact
Man-induced effects
Pollution effects
Water quality
Overfishing
Environmental impact
Man-induced effects
Pollution effects
Water quality
Overfishing
spellingShingle Environmental impact
Man-induced effects
Pollution effects
Water quality
Overfishing
Environmental impact
Man-induced effects
Pollution effects
Water quality
Overfishing
Angweya, R.
Okungu, J.
Abuodha, J.O.Z.
Hecky, R.E.
Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
description The Lake Victoria Basin (LVB) has become a focal point of development in Kenya, thereby attracting intensive multiple land use which has accelerated environmental degradation through siltation, water pollution and changes in flooding frequency. In addition, multi-sectoral uses of water have created competition among various water users without due regard to the need for ecological sustenance or the needs of downstream users. This pattern poses serious management problems. The LVB is used as a source of food, energy, drinking and irrigation water, shelter, transport and as a repository for human, agricultural and industrial waste. With the population of the riparian communities growing at rates among the highest in the world, the multiple activities in the lake basin have increasingly come into conflict. This has contributed to rendering the lake environmentally unstable. The lake ecosystem has undergone substantial, and to some observers alarming changes, which have accelerated over the last three decades. Massive blooms of algae have developed, and come increasingly to be dominated by the potentially toxic blue-green variety. The distance at which a white disc is visible from the surface, (a transparency index measuring algal abundance or secchi depth), has declined from 5 m in the early 1930s to 1 m or less for most of the year in the early 2000s. Water-borne diseases have increased in frequency. Water hyacinth, absent as late as 1989, has choked important waterways and landings. Overfishing and oxygen depletion at lower depths of the lake threaten the artisanal fisheries and biodiversity (over 200 indigenous species are believed to be facing possible extinction). Scientists advance two main hypotheses for these extensive changes. First, the introduction of the Nile perch as an exotic species some 30 years ago has altered the food web structure; second, nutrient inputs from the adjoining catchments are causing eutrophication. Thus, although the lake and its fishery show the evidence of the dramatic changes in the lake basin over the past century, the lake is not the source of the problem. The problem has arisen in the surrounding basins through polluting activities of humans activity and the demand for fish.
author2 Abuodha, J.O.Z.
author_facet Abuodha, J.O.Z.
Angweya, R.
Okungu, J.
Abuodha, J.O.Z.
Hecky, R.E.
format Book Section
topic_facet Environmental impact
Man-induced effects
Pollution effects
Water quality
Overfishing
author Angweya, R.
Okungu, J.
Abuodha, J.O.Z.
Hecky, R.E.
author_sort Angweya, R.
title Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
title_short Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
title_full Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
title_fullStr Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
title_full_unstemmed Environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of Lake Victoria.
title_sort environmental impacts of water quality change on beneficial uses of lake victoria.
publisher Lake Victoria Environment Management Project (LVEMP)
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/7138
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