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The Arab region is comprised of 21 countries,
extending from North Africa to South West Asia, over an estimated
total area of 14.1 million square kilometres. Its vast terrain
includes physiographic features of plains, plateaus, dry valleys
and relatively limited highlands and mountainous areas.
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| Sand encroachment
on the western fringes of the Old Nile Valley |
Countries of the region are distinguished by vast coastal areas
overlooking segments of the Arabian Gulf, the Arabian sea, the
Red Sea, the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The region's
population is expected to reach over 290 million by 2010, with
a continued growth rate estimated at an average of 2 per cent
per annum.
Aridity is the main climatic feature of the Arab region, and
hyper-arid or arid conditions prevail in over 89 per cent of
the area, while the remaining 11 per cent of semi-arid and limited
sub-humid areas are confined to elevated lands. Marginal rainfall
of up to 350 millimetres per year extends over the arid areas,
while semi-arid zones experience between 400 and 800 mm/year
and sub-humid areas between 800 and 1,500 mm/year. However,
rainfall throughout the region is characterized by rapid changes
in spacial distribution, seasonal variation, inter-annual variability,
varied intensities of sporadic showers and changing lengths
of the growing season. Most Arab countries experience highly
variable rainfalls and recurrent drought spells of varied severity
and length. Such high variabilities extend to average annual
temperatures, as well as maximum and minimum temperatures, varying
from freezing to a high of over 50? Celsius, depending on the
season and location.
These data clearly demonstrate the significant impact of climatic
features on land-use categories and the productivity of each
category, with special reference to rangelands, rain-fed cultivated
areas and the degradation processes in the region. Among the
most influential climatic factors is rainfall. The total amount
of rainwater received in the Arab region is estimated at 2,282
billion m3/year, compared to an estimated 205 billion m3/year
for surface water and 35 billion m3/year for groundwater. This
clearly shows that the mostly marginal rainfall in the region
represents the major water resource available, despite the constraints
facing water efficiency. As a result, national country reports
clearly show that a major fraction of the rainwater received
is lost through the combination of evapotranspiration, seepage,
run-off and flash floods through uncultivated wadies reaching
lakes and marine coastal areas. Recurrent drought spells have
definite adverse impacts on productivity of agro-ecological
zones, resulting in large economic losses and negative impacts
on social development.
The potential climate change scenarios are becoming real threats,
according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Elevated evapotranspiration and increased heat stress could
lead to enhanced water requirements of growing crops. The impacts
on pests and plant diseases, in addition to the possible changes
in rainfall patterns, could also be significant. Ocean- and
sea-level rise could lead to inundation of the lengthy coastal
areas of the Arab region that could result in loss of productivity,
salt-water intrusion, loss of valuable biodiversity of wetlands,
salinization of groundwater aquifers and migration of the population
living in the affected areas. In addition to the direct impacts
of climate changes, geomorphological features and human-induced
factors combine to cause serious land degradation processes
as depicted in the following:
Wind erosion. The processes of wind erosion, mobile sand
dunes and sand encroachment are active in all countries of the
Arab region. The areas affected, along with the rate and the
magnitude of the adverse environmental impacts of such processes,
vary from one country to another. Wind erosion is one of the
major factors of land degradation, both at the national and
regional levels.
Significant areas of most countries in the Arabian Peninsula
and northern Africa are covered by sand drifts: in Saudi Arabia
2.2 million km2; 90 per cent of the total area of the United
Arab Emirates; almost all of Kuwait; most of the western desert
of Egypt (more than 26 per cent of the total area); and several
zones in the Sudan and southern Morocco. Other countries are
affected to varied extents. The complex aerodynamics of wind
movement and the prevailing microclimate affect the sand drifts'
morphology and movement. Large amounts of sand encroachment
occur during the dry summer months (June to August). Direction
of the sand movement comes from the main wind direction, from
north and northwest, which accounts for more than 70 per cent
of the total drift movement. However, during strong monsoon
winds, drift movement occasionally occurs from southeast to
northwest.
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Countour
map of drift potentials (in vector units, vu's) in Arabian
Peninsula. Drift potentials are proportional to potential
sand moving power of the wind, using methods of Fryberger
(1979). 1 vu equals about 0.07 m3 m-w-1. Arrows show resultant
drift directions
After Fryberger, 1984 |
The problem of sand drifting is due to climatic factors, combined
with geological aspects of soil attributes and human-induced
factors, including deforestation, overgrazing and misuse of
land resources, which lead to degradation of natural plant cover.
In turn, this enhances the susceptibility of the barren soil
to erosional processes by wind and water. Moreover, military
operations in wars and conflicts cause considerable changes
in surface features, which stimulate deflation, abrasion and
drift migration. The adverse environmental and land degradation
impacts of sand encroachment and mobile dunes include encroachment
on productive agricultural lands, leading to marked lowering
of productivity and loss of top soil layers of higher fertility
and soil nutrients. Wind drifts cause serious constraints to
infrastructure and adverse impacts on health and social activities.
Water erosion. National reports of more than 10 Arab countries,
including Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, the
Sudan and Syria, point out that, despite prevailing aridity
at varied degrees, water erosion is still one of the main factors
of land degradation. Physiographic features, with heavy showers
and sporadic torrential rain of short durations, typical of
rainfall variabilities in the region, and degradation of natural
vegetative cover due to human mismanagement of land resources,
all combine to develop varied rates of soil water erosion. In
many cases, such processes lead to serious loss of top soil
materials that cause significant adverse impacts onsite and
offsite. Soil water erosion also causes dam reservoirs siltation
and soil loss to marine and coastal areas, leading to serious
environmental and economic consequences. The combined attributes
of climatic factors, physiographic features and rainfall characteristics
are fundamental for the implementation of water harvesting techniques
in the region. Appropriate water harvesting techniques are imperative
to support the water supply during the short rainy season, as
well as for supplemental irrigation of shrubs and trees in the
dry months.
Flash floods. Another example of the combined effect of
climatic factors and physiographic features is the formation
of serious floods during the rainy season. Despite the low rate
of rainfall, expanded areas of watersheds lead to the collection
and formation of floods, gushing with vigour and high velocity
through wadies or dry areas, causing damage to installations,
infrastructure and farmlands. A clear example is the flash flood
that occur in Sinai, Egypt, where watersheds of extended areas
and an annual average rainfall of only 50 mm collect serious
floods and follow slope patterns to the Gulf of Suez or the
Gulf of Aqaba.
Climatic features in the Arab region, either through direct
impacts or interactions with other factors, including physiographic
features, soil attributes, level of vegetative cover and human-induced
factors, lead to several processes that are highly interrelated
with land degradation and its adverse impacts in the region.
At present, all Arab countries engage in national and regional
activities to combat such processes and alleviate their consequences. |