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28 - Water regime management of desertificated ecotone systems in the Amudarya delta (Aral Sea basin)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

N.M. Novikova
Affiliation:
Water Problems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, 10 Novaya Basmannaya, P.O. Box 524, Moscow 107 078, Russia
I.N. Zabolotsky
Affiliation:
Water Problems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, 10 Novaya Basmannaya, P.O. Box 524, Moscow 107 078, Russia
Janine Gibert
Affiliation:
Université Lyon I
Jacques Mathieu
Affiliation:
Université Lyon I
Fred Fournier
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Division of Water Sciences
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Summary

ABSTRACT Regularities of the changes of ecosystems of the ecotones of stream and lake banks under the natural evolution of landscapes in the Amudarya delta are studied. Regimes of flooding and groundwater, typical to each stage of development, are revealed. Investigation of the modern conditions for two types of ecotone ecosystems (wetland and terrestrial) enable us to determine the degree of their desertification. The main concept of water regime management is to protect the biological diversity by means of conservation of all the variants of land – water ecotone systems.

Based on the present-day state-of-the-art of lake and tugai ecosystems in the Amudarya river delta, recommendations on their watering are developed to guarantee optimum functioning or rehabilitation of the ecosystems.

INTRODUCTION

The Aral Sea is situated in the centre of Turan desert area in Central Asia. Its water balance depends on the Amudarya and Syrdarya rivers inflow. Historically, the Aral Sea region has been desertified on several occasions. Recent desertification is a human-induced phenomenon brought about mainly by overuse of river flow in the middle and upper reaches of the Amudarya and Syrdarya rivers for the needs of developing irrigation. That leads to a lack of available water resources in deltas. Decreasing the input of the river water in the Aral sea and in the Amudarya and Syrdarya river deltas reached its critical means in 1960, where the main reservoirs was built and the irrigated area in the Aral Sea basin became 1 × 106 ha. Since this time the Aral Sea level has dropped from the absolute elevation of 53 metres to 30 metres in 1991.

Type
Chapter
Information
Groundwater/Surface Water Ecotones
Biological and Hydrological Interactions and Management Options
, pp. 212 - 218
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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