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Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity

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dc.contributor.author de Clercq, W
dc.contributor.author Jovanovic, Nebojsa
dc.contributor.author Bugan, Richard DH
dc.contributor.author Mashimbye, E
dc.contributor.author Du Toit, T
dc.contributor.author Van Niekerk, A
dc.contributor.author Ellis, F
dc.contributor.author Wasserfall, N
dc.contributor.author Both, P
dc.contributor.author Steudels, T
dc.contributor.author Helmschrot, J
dc.contributor.author Wolfgang, W-A
dc.date.accessioned 2014-07-18T09:12:31Z
dc.date.available 2014-07-18T09:12:31Z
dc.date.issued 2013-04
dc.identifier.citation De Clercq, W., Jovanovic, N., Bugan, R., Mashimbye, E., Du Toit, T., Van Niekerk, A., Ellis, F., Wasserfall, N., Both, P., Steudels, T., Helmschrot, J. and Wolfgang, A. 2013. Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity. Research Report: 1849/1/13. South African Water Research Commission, Pretoria, South Africa en_US
dc.identifier.isbn 978-1-4312-0402-1
dc.identifier.uri http://www.wrc.org.za/Pages/DisplayItem.aspx?ItemID=10624&FromURL=%2FPages%2FKH_ResearchReport.aspx%3Fdt%3D1%26ms%3D20%3B%26d%3DManagement+of+human-induced+salinisation+in+the+Berg+River+catchment+and+development+of+criteria+for+regulating+agricultural+land+use+in+terms+of+salt+generating+capacity%26start%3D72
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7488
dc.description Research Report: 1849/1/13. South African Water Research Commission, Pretoria, South Africa en_US
dc.description.abstract From previous WRC work by the same group, various needs were identified. One was to examine the effects a range of land uses may have on the production of salinity from the Sandspruit catchment. Another was to develop criteria to manage the salt production from this area. In the days of Dr Martin Fourie (1976), it was apparent that the load of salinity reaching the Berg River differed from sub-catchment to sub-catchment along the river. This project set out to establish if the range of agricultural practices in the region could be related to the differences in salt production in any way. In so doing, the team had to analyse the whole drainage path towards the river, make sure that this was duly represented in the models that were used and then test the effect that land use change had on the salinity and water levels that reached the Berg River. By implication the study did not focus on hydrological modelling only, but also on the understanding of the system through research aimed at determining the origin of salt, the behaviour of soils in this landscape and the effect different cultivation practices had on the water flow path. Subsequently, it had to be ascertained whether the hydrological models assessed these flows in an appropriate manner. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher South African Water Research Commission en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;12777
dc.subject Human-induced salinisation en_US
dc.subject Salinisation en_US
dc.subject Berg River en_US
dc.subject Agricultural land use en_US
dc.title Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity en_US
dc.type Report en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation de Clercq, W., Jovanovic, N., Bugan, R. D., Mashimbye, E., Du Toit, T., Van Niekerk, A., ... Wolfgang, W. (2013). <i>Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity</i> (Workflow;12777). South African Water Research Commission. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7488 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation de Clercq, W, Nebojsa Jovanovic, Richard DH Bugan, E Mashimbye, T Du Toit, A Van Niekerk, F Ellis, et al <i>Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity.</i> Workflow;12777. South African Water Research Commission, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7488 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation de Clercq W, Jovanovic N, Bugan RD, Mashimbye E, Du Toit T, Van Niekerk A, et al. Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity. 2013 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7488 en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Report AU - de Clercq, W AU - Jovanovic, Nebojsa AU - Bugan, Richard DH AU - Mashimbye, E AU - Du Toit, T AU - Van Niekerk, A AU - Ellis, F AU - Wasserfall, N AU - Both, P AU - Steudels, T AU - Helmschrot, J AU - Wolfgang, W-A AB - From previous WRC work by the same group, various needs were identified. One was to examine the effects a range of land uses may have on the production of salinity from the Sandspruit catchment. Another was to develop criteria to manage the salt production from this area. In the days of Dr Martin Fourie (1976), it was apparent that the load of salinity reaching the Berg River differed from sub-catchment to sub-catchment along the river. This project set out to establish if the range of agricultural practices in the region could be related to the differences in salt production in any way. In so doing, the team had to analyse the whole drainage path towards the river, make sure that this was duly represented in the models that were used and then test the effect that land use change had on the salinity and water levels that reached the Berg River. By implication the study did not focus on hydrological modelling only, but also on the understanding of the system through research aimed at determining the origin of salt, the behaviour of soils in this landscape and the effect different cultivation practices had on the water flow path. Subsequently, it had to be ascertained whether the hydrological models assessed these flows in an appropriate manner. DA - 2013-04 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Human-induced salinisation KW - Salinisation KW - Berg River KW - Agricultural land use LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2013 SM - 978-1-4312-0402-1 T1 - Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity TI - Management of human-induced salinisation in the Berg River catchment and development of criteria for regulating agricultural land use in terms of salt generating capacity UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7488 ER - en_ZA


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