• Title of article

    Desiccation of the Gomoti River: Biophysical process and indigenous resource management in Northern Botswana

  • Author/Authors

    T. Bernard، نويسنده , , N. Moetapele، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    28
  • From page
    256
  • To page
    283
  • Abstract
    For at least 200 years, Gomoti River people and their neighbours lived interactively with the Okavango flood pulse system, travelling widely in dugout canoes, practicing flood recession agriculture, fishing, hunting, and collecting wild foods. Today they are wetlanders without wetlands. A major outflow channel of the eastern Okavango Delta in the 1930s, the Gomoti River rarely flows these days. This paper explores the Gomotiʹs demise, through the lenses first of science and second of Gomoti basin residents. Models developed over the past 20 years attribute the Gomotiʹs drying to a complex set of bio-hydrologic processes and feedback loops that begin with sedimentation and conclude with channel switching, peat fires, and purging of toxic salts. Such models essentially omit the long history of human habitation and ecological interaction with the delta. Local people, on the other hand, tell of deliberate and systematic management of channels and floodplains, and they argue this management kept the river healthy and flowing. The picture is confounded by colonial era interventions and by Botswana government policies partitioning the Gomoti and restricting access to its headwaters. We conclude with a model combining meso-scale scientific explanation with micro-scale indigenous constructions as a context for new thinking about Okavango Delta resource management.
  • Keywords
    Flood pulse system , Indigenous natural resource management , Wetlandprocess , River desiccation , Human ecology , Gomoti River , Okavango Delta
  • Journal title
    Journal of Arid Environments
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Journal of Arid Environments
  • Record number

    763546