1 / 42

REGIONAL SLIDES

REGIONAL SLIDES. AFRICA. Velingara, Senegal Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania Flood in Mozambique Parrot’s Beak, Sierra Leone/Liberia Banjul, Gambia Tripoli, Libya Midrand, South Africa Lake Victoria, Uganda Mount Kenya, Kenya Tai National Park, Cote d’Ivoire. AFRICA. Itampolo, Madagascar

arav
Download Presentation

REGIONAL SLIDES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. REGIONAL SLIDES

  2. AFRICA • Velingara, Senegal • Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania • Flood in Mozambique • Parrot’s Beak, Sierra Leone/Liberia • Banjul, Gambia • Tripoli, Libya • Midrand, South Africa • Lake Victoria, Uganda • Mount Kenya, Kenya • Tai National Park, Cote d’Ivoire

  3. AFRICA • Itampolo, Madagascar • Kisangani, D.R. of Congo • Challawa Gorge Dam, Nigeria • Lake Chad, Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon • Lesotho Highlands Water Project, Lesotho • Lake Nakuru, Kenya • Peanut Basin, Senegal • Revane, Senegal • Narok, Kenya • Toshka Project, Egypt

  4. AFRICA • Africa is a region of occurrences – from tsunamis to droughts; fires to floods and meteor impacts to epidemics and pandemics • Between 1975 and 2005, the population more than doubled from 335 to 751 million and is predicted to reach 1.1 billion by 2025 • Currently Africa’s growth rate is at 2.2 per cent a year • Total forest area of Africa is 5 683 131 km2; Africa constitutes about 17 per cent of the world's forests; Nigeria has the world’s highest deforestation rate • 300 million Africans do not have access to safe water, about 313 million have no access to sanitation and over 88 million people are malnourished • In Africa, agriculture provides livelihoods for about 60 per cent of the continent's active labour force, contributes to 17 per cent of Africa's total gross domestic product and accounts for 40 per cent of its foreign currency earnings Sources: FAO, Population Reference Bureau

  5. Meteor Impact in Velingara, Senegal Velingara Crater appears to be a meteor-impact-generated structure • 1975: Image predates the agricultural development • 2001: Intense agricultural systems have appeared near the center of the crater

  6. Disappearing Icecap of Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania Africa’s highest mountain with a forest belt having rich diversity of ecosystems • 1976: Glaciers covered most of the summit • 2000: The glaciers had receded alarmingly

  7. Mozambique under Water 2000: Due to severe flooding, half a million people were made homeless and 700 lost their lives 22 August 1999: Mozambique under normal conditions 1 March 2000: Mozambique under water

  8. Impact of Civil Wars on Guinea These images show impact of civil wars in Liberia on neighboring Guinea • 1974: Image of the Parrot’s Beak region in Guinea • 2002: The light green color is the result of deforestation in the “safe area” where refugees set up camp

  9. Urban Sprawl in Banjul, Gambia Images show urban sprawl and its impact • 1973: Urban growth and expansion of cropland has led to decline in woodland • 1999: Abuko Nature Reserve is an isolated patch of green in the 1999 image

  10. Undergoing Steady Urban Growth - Tripoli, Libya • 1976: Grasslands have been converted into agricultural fields • 2002: Urban expansion is especially notable (shades of grey)

  11. Industrializing Midrand, South Africa Rapidly transforming city due to population growth, agriculture, mining, and industry • 1978: Surrounding area consists largely of agriculture • 2002: High density urban development

  12. Impact of Invasive Species on Lake Victoria, Uganda These images show water hyacinth infestation and control of such invasive species • 1995: Image shows several water-hyacinth-choked bays (yellow arrows) • 2001: A visible reduction of Water Hyacinth on Lake Victoria

  13. Population Growth Around Lake Victoria, Uganda • The population growth around 100 km buffer zone of the Lake Victoria • Population growth around Lake Victoria, East Africa, is the highest in Africa

  14. World’s Fastest Growing Rural Area – Lake Victoria, Uganda Note: Figures for 2010 and 2015 are estimates.

  15. Population Growth: Lake Victoria vs. Africa Note: Figures for 2010 and 2015 are estimates.

  16. Diversity in Mt. Kenya Ecosystems Kenya These images show high diversity in ecosystems and species • 2000: The entire forest belt of Mount Kenya was gazetted as National Reserve • 2002: The image shows significant improvement in the state of conservation of forests

  17. Tai National Park, Côte d’Ivoire – site of world’s highest deforestation rate These images show deforestation rate in the area, believed to be one of the highest in the world • 1988: Shows destruction of small forest fragments • 2002: The lighter green strip bisecting the images is the result of extensive deforestation and intensive cultivation

  18. Disappearing Forests in Itampolo, Madagascar These images show the changes in narrow coastal plain • 1973: Shows heavily forested area home to unique and rare plant and animal species • 2001: Burning of forest to clear land for dry rice cultivation, has led to disappearance of forest area (seen as tan)

  19. Steady Deforestation in KisanganiDemocratic Republic of Congo These images show slow but steady deforestation of dense forest cover • 1975: The city and surrounding areas are clearly visible • 2001: The cleared area around the city has grown and become consolidated, spreading along rivers and roads

  20. Impact of Challawa Gorge DamNigeria These images show the area before and after construction of the dam • 1990: Image of the area before the completion of the dam in 1993 • 1999: Impact of flooding upstream from the dam; colour of the water in the flooded area indicates high sediments

  21. Shrinking Lake Chad shared by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon Persistent drought has shrunk the lake to about a tenth of its former size • 1972: Larger lake surface area is visible in this image • 2001: Impact of drought displays a shrunken lake, comparatively much smaller surface area than in 1972 image

  22. Skepticism surrounding Lesotho Highland Water Project in South Africa These images show the area before and after construction of Katse dam • 1989: Image of the area before the completion of the dam in 1995 • 2001: Katse dam created an enormous reservoir, the extent of which can clearly be seen in this image

  23. Land Cover Degradation Around Lake Nakuru, Kenya These images show the land cover degradation in the lake’s catchment • 1973: The area that hosts the world’s largest concentration of flamingos • 2000: Excision of forest in the Eastern Mau Forest Reserve (white lines) will most likely lead to disappearance of upper catchment forest cover

  24. Battle between Forests vs. FarmlandsPeanut Basin, Senegal Shows growing patchwork of savannas (greenish patches) • 1979: Image shows farmland before being abandoned • 1999: Hundreds of villages are scattered throughout the region to enjoy fallow and grazing lands

  25. Changing Landscape in Ravene, Senegal Images show impact of drought and over-grazing on the woody vegetation • 1965: Ancient valleys cutting through gravelly plateaus, with extensive bushland vegetation • 1999: The badland phenomenon spread extensively along the shallow valley slopes

  26. Converted Lands of Narok, Kenya These images show the conversion of grasslands into agricultural fields • 1975: The agricultural expansion is just beginning • 2000: This image shows the degree to which farmlands have expanded

  27. Toshka Lakes: Farming the DesertEgypt These images show the desert area transformed into vegetable plots • 1984-87: Image of the area before the desert reclamation project began in mid-1990s n • 2000: Four new lakes are visible in this image, faint blue-green areas around the lakes are newly created agricultural lands

  28. Toshka Lakes: Farming the DesertEgypt 2005: New fields are clearly visible in the image

  29. AFRICA’S LAKES • Lake Kivu, Congo/Rwanda • Lake Alaotra, Madagascar • Lake Al Wahda, Morocco • Lake Cahora Basa, Mozambique • Lake Chivero, Zimbabwe • Lake Djoudj, Senegal • Lake Ichkeul, Tunisia • Lake Manantali, Mali • Lake Sibaya, South Africa • Songor Lagoon, Ghana • Lake Tonga, Algeria

  30. AFRICA’S LAKES • According to the WORLDLAKE database, there are 677 lakes in Africa • There are 15 natural lakes that cross the political boundaries of two or more countries in Africa • There are 60 transboundary river basins in Africa, covering over 63 per cent of the continent’s land area • Lake Chad’s surface area has shrunk by 95 per cent over the past 35 years • Uncontrolled damming, the withdrawal of water for irrigation, and climate variability are the major causes of drying up of Lake Tonga in Algeria • Population growth around Lake Victoria, the continent’s largest lake, is significantly higher than the rest of Africa • Some lakes in central Africa have become known as “killer lakes,” because of the catastrophic natural events that have occurred in their vicinity Sources: UNEP 2006

  31. Lake Kivu-one of Africa’s “killer lakes”Congo/Rwanda These images show dramatic changes before and after the eruption of Mt. Nyiragongo in 2002 • 2001: Before the January 2002 eruption • 2003: Shows the track of the lava flow

  32. Severe flooding around Lake AlaotraMadagascar These images show flooding over a wide area • Flooding destroys significant portion of crops • Intensive rice irrigation occurs at the western part of the lake (yellow arrows)

  33. Impact of Al Wahda reservoir in Morocco These images illustrate the change in land cover • 1987: The area before the construction of dams • 2001: The area after the construction of 110 large dams

  34. Cahora Basa – Mozambique’s largest dam on the Zambezi River These images show spectacular changes in the Zambezi riverine system • 1972: The Zambezi River a few years before the dam construction • 1999: This image shows part of the enormous dam and the lake

  35. Invasive water weeds in Lake Chivero, Zimbabwe These images show overall reduction in water weeds • 1989: Weeds show up as green strands along the edges of the lake • 2000: This image shows that water weeds remains a persistent problem

  36. Rejuvenation of the Djoudj Sanctuary in Senegal These images show the Djoudj Sanctuary before and after the construction of the Diama Dam • 1979: Shows the impact of drought on the Djoudj Sanctuary • 1999: Rejuvenation of the Sanctuary wetlands due to significant floods

  37. Ecological changes around Lake Ichkeul, Tunisia These images show the impact of damming • 1972: Shows the three feeder rivers supplying the lake before they were dammed • 2000: Shows the location of the dams (yellow arrows)

  38. Agricultural expansion around Lake Manantali, Mali These images show the expansion of irrigated agriculture • 1977: Shows the original meandering nature of the Bafing River • 1999: Shows the expanded irrigated land and increase in lake water quantity

  39. Lake Sibaya – wetland of international important in South Africa These images show increase in cultivation around the lake • 1991: Lakeshore is home to the only known species of a rare climbing orchid • 2001: The yellow arrows vividly show the increase of cultivation of marginal lands around the lake

  40. Reduction in the surface area of Songor Lagoon, Ghana These images show a conspicuous reduction in the surface area • 1990: Shows major lagoon system associated with Volta river estuary • 2000: This image shows water area dramatically reduced, exposing bare ground

  41. Changes in and around Lake TongaAlgeria These images show the changes brought about by damming of the feeder rivers • 1988: Lake Tonga before the damming of feeder rivers • 2000: Damming increased irrigation and drastically reduced the volume of water entering the lake

  42. AFRICA One Planet Many People: Atlas of Our Changing Environment Thank You! Free Downloads: www.na.unep.net Purchase: www.Earthprint.com

More Related