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North African wetland lakes: characterization of nine sites included in the CASSARINA Project
Authors:Mohammed Ramdani  Roger J. Flower  Najat Elkhiati  Mohammed M. Kraïem  Adel A. Fathi  Hilary H. Birks  Simon T. Patrick
Affiliation:(1) Institut Scientifique, Départ. Zoologie et Ecologie Animale, Charia Ibn Batota, B.P. 703, 10106 Rabat, Morocco;(2) Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, London WC1H OAP, UK;(3) Faculté des Sciences Ain Chock, Départ. Biologie, km 8 Route d'Eljadida, BP 5366, Casablanca, Morocco;(4) Faculté des Sciences, Dept. de Biologie, Campus Universitaire, 1060 Tunis, Tunisia;(5) Department of Botany, University of El Minia, El Minia, 61111, Egypt;(6) Botanical Institute, University of Bergen, Allégaten 41, N-5007, Bergen, Norway
Abstract:Exploitation of land and water resources has increased rapidly in North Africa during the 20th century, paralleling regional population growth. As part of the CASSARINA Project (see Flower, 2001), the environmental status of nine wetland lakes in Morocco, Tunisia, and Egypt was evaluated. All are conservationally important habitats and several are Ramsar Sites (internationally recognized bird reserves) and several support significant fisheries. All are shallow (<2 m in depth) but vary greatly in area.Where available, documentary information on relevant 20th century changes is given. Survey transects for aquatic vegetation were established and used to provide baseline ecological information on the aquatic plant communities during 1997–1999. Unusually, one site (Tunisian Megene Chitane) supported acidophilous vegetation (some taxa being nationally rare). Aquatic macrophytes declined catastrophically at two sites during the 1990s. Merja Bokka was drained in 1998 and, at Garaet El Ichkeul, fringing Phragmites and Scirpusspp. were lost, mainly as a result of salinity changes. Elsewhere, fringing macrophytes remain (extensively so in the Nile Delta lakes) common, despite major land reclamation and water quality problems, or are degraded by grazing (Merja Zerga). Marginal vegetation during 1997/98 changed markedly at Megene Chitane due to water level lowering.Documentary records indicated that throughout the 20th century, reclamation and hydrologic modifications, mainly for agricultural purposes, affected all nine sites. The loss of lake area by reclamation is substantial for the Nile Delta lakes (Edku, Burullus and Manzala). For the western sites, some data indicate increasing salinity in the most recent decade but the Delta lakes have become generally fresher during the 20th century, as supply of Nile water for irrigation increased.Despite intense human disturbance, many of the remaining CASSARINA sites still support regions of high aquatic diversity. Spatial scale monitoring of the larger sites for seasonal and inter-annual changes in open water area and in aquatic plant abundances is a key requirement for integrated environmental change assessment in the 21st century.
Keywords:aquatic vegetation  documentary records  North Africa  wetland lakes
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