Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

agricultural and biological sciences

Wildlife-water quality interactions in the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

African Journal of Ecology, Volume 36, No. 1, Year 1998

Surveys of water quality in the surface waters in the Serengeti National Park were undertaken in both the wet and dry seasons of 1996. Most rivers were ponded, with ponds having a flushing time of 1 month in the wet season and zero flushing in the dry season. pH values varied spatially from extremely alkaline conditions (pH> 10) in the southern plains to acidic conditions in the northern region (pH = 5.9). In the southern plains at the end of the dry season the salinity of surface waters was high (5-17‰) while there was abundant surface water and the zebras and wildebeest had started to migrate away, a finding suggesting excessive salinity may be the trigger initiating the annual migration. Most surface waters were heavily eutrophicated as a result of animal dung. As a result, the dissolved oxygen concentration near the surface fluctuated widely between 1 and 200% of saturation, smaller values occurring deeper in the water column. Stirring and mechanical aeration by hippos, crocodiles and mammals crossing the rivers prevented the formation of anoxic conditions. The oxygen stress was measurably lessened in wetland-fringed water bodies as a result of filtering. Light penetration was high (≤ 10 cm) in saline waters as a result of flocculation enhanced by bacteria and vegetation detritus, elsewhere the euphotic zone was less than 1 cm thick and the waters generally inhospitable to aquatic life. The discontinuity between wooded savanna and grassland coincides with the occurrence of alkaline, high salinity waters in the dry season.
Statistics
Citations: 70
Authors: 2
Affiliations: 2
Research Areas
Environmental
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Qualitative
Study Locations
Tanzania