Comparing Flow Regime, Channel Hydraulics and Biological Communities to Infer Flow-Ecology Relationships in the Mara River of Kenya and Tanzania
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Date
2014
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Abstract
Equatorial rivers of East Africa exhibit unusually complex seasonal and inter-annual flow regimes,
and aquatic and adjacent terrestrial organisms have adapted to cope with this flow variability. This study
examined the annual flow regime over the past 40 years for three gauging stations on the Mara River in Kenya
and Tanzania, which is of international importance because it is the only perennial river traversing the MaraSerengeti
ecoregion. Select environmental flow components were quantified and converted to ecologically
relevant hydraulic variables. Vegetation, macroinvertebrates, and fish were collected and identified at target
study sites during low and high flows. The results were compared with available knowledge of the life histories
and flow sensitivities of the riverine communities to infer flow–ecology relationships. Management implications
are discussed, including the need to preserve a dynamic environmental flow regime to protect ecosystems
in the region. The results for the Mara may serve as a useful model for river basins of the wider equatorial East
Africa region.
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Keywords
Environmental flows, East Africa, Mara River, Ecological integrity, Flow indicators, Kenya, Tanzania
Citation
McClain, M.E., Subalusky, A.L., Anderson, E.P., Dessu, S.B., Melesse, A.M., Ndomba, P.M., Mtamba, J.O., Tamatamah, R.A. and Mligo, C., 2014. Comparing flow regime, channel hydraulics, and biological communities to infer flow–ecology relationships in the Mara River of Kenya and Tanzania. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 59(3-4), pp.801-819.