Investigation of sustainability of rain-fed agriculture through soil moisture modeling in the Pandamatenga Plains of Botswana
Date
2006Author
Alemaw, B.F.
Chaoka, T.R.
Totolo, O.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd. http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/413/description#descriptionType
ArticleMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The agricultural economic sector of Botswana is limited mainly to range resources-based livestock and pockets of arable farming
based on rainfall and limited irrigated agriculture at several places. In this study agricultural sustainability of rain-fed agriculture is investigated
in Botswana by considering the Pandamatenga plains as a case study. Daily soil moisture regimes with respect to crop growth
cycle were modelled using a water balance model based on 42 years of daily hydroclimatic inputs and corresponding simulated components
of soil moisture, evaporation, surface runoff, and deep percolation. Using a sustainability criterion on crop water requirement and
soil moisture availability during the cropping periods, it was found that rain-fed agriculture of maize, sunflower, and sorghum crops is
sustainable. The relative sensitivity to drought of these crops was also found to conform to the Agromisa recommendations. In the pursuit
to explore more IWRM opportunities, through the simulation of the corresponding direct runoff, we have also explored that more
water harvesting opportunities exist in order to manage rainfall excesses effectively.