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Integrated catchment management
Water plays a major role in land degradation processes. Replacing
the efficient, deep-rooted, perennial native vegetation with
shallow-rooted, annual crops interferes with the water cycle.
More of the rainfall reaches the water table and more water
runs off across the surface. In areas where large amounts
of salt have been stored in the subsoil, rising water tables
bring it to the surface and cause soil and stream salinity
problems. These problems rarely occur in isolation; other
land degradation problems, such as soil erosion, loss of soil
structure and waterlogging often accompany it.
Increasingly, land degradation in our State is tackled on
a 'whole catchment' basis, since the actions of a landholder
high in the catchment will influence what happens further
down the slope. Integrated catchment management is a planning
and implementation process that allows for good coordination
between management authorities and landholders.
What is a catchment?
A
catchment is an area where the land drains to a common creek
or river. A Catchment's size can vary from several hectares
to thousands of square kilometres. The soils, climate, geology,
and hydrology of a catchment affect its water balance. Only
when people understand the structure of their catchment can
effective land protection measures be planned.
The hydrology is especially important. Data is collected
on rainfall and evaporation in the catchment. The amount of
water running off the surface and the amount reaching the
watertable (recharge) are measured. Groundwater levels are
determined and monitored to check their rate of rise.
A salinity example
Let's look at one water balance problem and see what integrated
catchment management can do to solve it. The basic cause of
salinity is the extra water that escapes beyond the root zone
of agricultural plants compared with the native vegetation.
The amount is not large (4 to 11 per cent of annual rainfall)
but over periods of time this can bring the water table close
enough to the surface to cause salinity problems. The main
aim of integrated catchment management is, therefore, to use
as much of the rainfall where it falls as possible. This can
be achieved in many ways:
- Trees and other deep-rooted plants can be planted on areas
where a lot of water enters the soil to recharge the water
table. Forage trees, such as Tagasaste ("Tags")
and Acacia salignia (Golden wattle) can reduce recharge
while producing valuable stock feed.
- High-water-using crops and perennial pastures (for example,
lupins and dryland lucerne) can be planted to reduce the
amount of water reaching the water table.
- Increased cropping, by leaving out the annual pasture
phase, will allow less water to recharge because crops use
more water than pasture. (Continuous cropping - wheat lupin
rotations.)
- Ensuring that plants are properly fertilised will enable
plants to use as much water as possible.
- Remnants of native vegetation should be maintained; trees
are very efficient water pumps.
- Grade banks can be used to discharge water safely to creeks,
reducing the risk of water erosion and waterlogging.
It is obvious then that every landholder in the catchment
has a part to play in the whole catchment solution. What each
does depends on the location in the catchment and local conditions.
Hence, landholders need a 'blueprint' for organising and sharing
catchment-based strategies. Land Conservation District Committees
and catchment groups are groups of farmers with a common goal
in the area of land degradation. These groups are the driving
force in drawing up catchment plans (see also Landcare Groups
- The community response).
How
do groups make it work?
Below is a brief outline of the concepts that catchment groups
need to consider when they plan their catchment management
strategy.
The assessment of physical features:
- Draw up an inventory of the physical resources: geology,
soil, drainage, native vegetation.
- Define land units. Land units are parcels of land that
have like characteristics.
- What are the current landuses in the catchment?
- Define land use options for each land unit, based on land
capability.
- Map land management units for each land use.
Development of land management strategies
- Define existing land degradation problems.
- Determine options for solutions and their practical methods
for implementation.
- Suggest how land degradation practices can be avoided.
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