Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective

As coastal areas continue to experience population and economic growth, there is a need for more holistic understanding of the attendant environmental challenges towards ensuring sustainability. The over 8300km continental coastline stretch of East and Horn of Africa from Sudan to Tanzania is not an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Temitope Ezekiel Idowu, Kayode H. Lasisi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-07-01
Series:Scientific African
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246822762030140X
id doaj-fc0657e3850241c3a206350d534fb4d4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fc0657e3850241c3a206350d534fb4d42020-11-25T02:31:35ZengElsevierScientific African2468-22762020-07-018e00402Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspectiveTemitope Ezekiel Idowu0Kayode H. Lasisi1School of Civil and Resource Engineering, FEBE, Technical University of Kenya, P.O Box 52428-00200, Nairobi, Kenya; Corresponding author.Civil & Environmental Engineering Department, Federal University of Technology, Akure, NigeriaAs coastal areas continue to experience population and economic growth, there is a need for more holistic understanding of the attendant environmental challenges towards ensuring sustainability. The over 8300km continental coastline stretch of East and Horn of Africa from Sudan to Tanzania is not an exception. A typical challenge associated with coastal areas is seawater intrusion (SWI) into coastal aquifers. Several efforts have been made in understanding this phenomenon and developing management strategies in different parts of the world. This has led to an evolution of different techniques for assessing the extent of seawater intrusion. This paper explores the status and extent of SWI studies in the region, focusing on the trend of techniques and methodologies used in the past 5 years. The findings show that at a regional level, there is more empirical knowledge on SWI in Kenya, Djibouti, and Tanzania while that of Sudan, Eritrea, and Somalia is largely vague for obvious reasons – more studies have been conducted in the former countries. Hydrogeochemical techniques coupled with statistical and analytical tools are the most prevalent approaches. Furthermore, the extents of SWI vary significantly from location to location but rarely extend beyond a few km inland in the region. SWI extent and severity were also shown to vary with seasons in studies covering temporal dimensions. The review shows that more research capacity building is needed especially in countries like Sudan, Somalia, Djibouti and Eritrea. Finally, recommendations on SWI research and management frontiers to explore in the region are suggested.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246822762030140XSeawater intrusion (SWI)Coastal aquiferGroundwater pollutionEastern AfricaGeochemistryEnvironmental sustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Temitope Ezekiel Idowu
Kayode H. Lasisi
spellingShingle Temitope Ezekiel Idowu
Kayode H. Lasisi
Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
Scientific African
Seawater intrusion (SWI)
Coastal aquifer
Groundwater pollution
Eastern Africa
Geochemistry
Environmental sustainability
author_facet Temitope Ezekiel Idowu
Kayode H. Lasisi
author_sort Temitope Ezekiel Idowu
title Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
title_short Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
title_full Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
title_fullStr Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
title_full_unstemmed Seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of East and Horn of Africa: A review from a regional perspective
title_sort seawater intrusion in the coastal aquifers of east and horn of africa: a review from a regional perspective
publisher Elsevier
series Scientific African
issn 2468-2276
publishDate 2020-07-01
description As coastal areas continue to experience population and economic growth, there is a need for more holistic understanding of the attendant environmental challenges towards ensuring sustainability. The over 8300km continental coastline stretch of East and Horn of Africa from Sudan to Tanzania is not an exception. A typical challenge associated with coastal areas is seawater intrusion (SWI) into coastal aquifers. Several efforts have been made in understanding this phenomenon and developing management strategies in different parts of the world. This has led to an evolution of different techniques for assessing the extent of seawater intrusion. This paper explores the status and extent of SWI studies in the region, focusing on the trend of techniques and methodologies used in the past 5 years. The findings show that at a regional level, there is more empirical knowledge on SWI in Kenya, Djibouti, and Tanzania while that of Sudan, Eritrea, and Somalia is largely vague for obvious reasons – more studies have been conducted in the former countries. Hydrogeochemical techniques coupled with statistical and analytical tools are the most prevalent approaches. Furthermore, the extents of SWI vary significantly from location to location but rarely extend beyond a few km inland in the region. SWI extent and severity were also shown to vary with seasons in studies covering temporal dimensions. The review shows that more research capacity building is needed especially in countries like Sudan, Somalia, Djibouti and Eritrea. Finally, recommendations on SWI research and management frontiers to explore in the region are suggested.
topic Seawater intrusion (SWI)
Coastal aquifer
Groundwater pollution
Eastern Africa
Geochemistry
Environmental sustainability
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246822762030140X
work_keys_str_mv AT temitopeezekielidowu seawaterintrusioninthecoastalaquifersofeastandhornofafricaareviewfromaregionalperspective
AT kayodehlasisi seawaterintrusioninthecoastalaquifersofeastandhornofafricaareviewfromaregionalperspective
_version_ 1724823524208541696