Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya

Water bird characteristics, nutrient loadings, and the levels of bottom sediment silicon oxide (SiO2), aluminium oxide (Al2O3), ferric oxide (Fe2O3), calcium oxide (CaO), copper (Cu), phosphorus (P) and organic carbon (C) was studied in eight high altitude (2040-2640m) small shallow (0.065-0.249 km2...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mwaura, Francis
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Research and Extension Office, Haramaya University 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392
id ftjafricanj:oai:ojs.ajol.info:article/125392
record_format openpolar
spelling ftjafricanj:oai:ojs.ajol.info:article/125392 2023-05-15T18:07:05+02:00 Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya Mwaura, Francis 2015-11-09 application/pdf http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392 eng eng Research and Extension Office, Haramaya University http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392/114926 http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392 10.4314/eajsci.v8i2. Copyright is owned by the Haramaya University East African Journal of Sciences; Vol 8, No 2 (2014); 91-104 1992-0407 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2015 ftjafricanj 2015-11-15T01:06:27Z Water bird characteristics, nutrient loadings, and the levels of bottom sediment silicon oxide (SiO2), aluminium oxide (Al2O3), ferric oxide (Fe2O3), calcium oxide (CaO), copper (Cu), phosphorus (P) and organic carbon (C) was studied in eight high altitude (2040-2640m) small shallow (0.065-0.249 km2; 0.9-3.1 m) reservoirs in the central rift valley of Kenya. The general aim was to assess the nature of the bottom sediments in relation to nutrient balance in the water bodies and their birdlife from a geographic perspective of spatial comparative analysis. The findings showed positive correlation between the levels of SiO2, CaO and P with the levels of total-N and total-P. In addition, there was an inverse correlation between C, Al2O3, Cu and Fe2O3 in the bottom sediment and two nutrients. A total of six water bird counts across the eight sites recorded 49 species for all the reservoirs and an overall average of 60 individuals per reservoir. The counts of nine water bird species were established to increase significantly with increase in the levels of total-N and total-P. The results indicated a correlation with the levels of SiO2, C, P, Fe2O3, and CaO in the bottom sediment for 12 water bird species, namely, African Fish Eagle, African Jacana, Black-headed Heron, Brack Crake, Common Teal, Great Egret, Great White Pelican, Grey Crowned Crane, Knob-billed Duck, Purple Gallinule, Ringed Plover, and Yellow-billed. The most sensitive species were the African Fish Eagle, Brack Crake, Common Teal, Great White Pelican, and Purple Gallinule. The actual impact of sediment chemistry on the utilization of reservoirs by water birds was not established and should, therefore, be an important subject for further investigation.Keywords: Bottom Sediments; Total-N; Total-P; Tropical Reservoir; Waterbirds Article in Journal/Newspaper Ringed Plover AJOL - African Journals Online
institution Open Polar
collection AJOL - African Journals Online
op_collection_id ftjafricanj
language English
description Water bird characteristics, nutrient loadings, and the levels of bottom sediment silicon oxide (SiO2), aluminium oxide (Al2O3), ferric oxide (Fe2O3), calcium oxide (CaO), copper (Cu), phosphorus (P) and organic carbon (C) was studied in eight high altitude (2040-2640m) small shallow (0.065-0.249 km2; 0.9-3.1 m) reservoirs in the central rift valley of Kenya. The general aim was to assess the nature of the bottom sediments in relation to nutrient balance in the water bodies and their birdlife from a geographic perspective of spatial comparative analysis. The findings showed positive correlation between the levels of SiO2, CaO and P with the levels of total-N and total-P. In addition, there was an inverse correlation between C, Al2O3, Cu and Fe2O3 in the bottom sediment and two nutrients. A total of six water bird counts across the eight sites recorded 49 species for all the reservoirs and an overall average of 60 individuals per reservoir. The counts of nine water bird species were established to increase significantly with increase in the levels of total-N and total-P. The results indicated a correlation with the levels of SiO2, C, P, Fe2O3, and CaO in the bottom sediment for 12 water bird species, namely, African Fish Eagle, African Jacana, Black-headed Heron, Brack Crake, Common Teal, Great Egret, Great White Pelican, Grey Crowned Crane, Knob-billed Duck, Purple Gallinule, Ringed Plover, and Yellow-billed. The most sensitive species were the African Fish Eagle, Brack Crake, Common Teal, Great White Pelican, and Purple Gallinule. The actual impact of sediment chemistry on the utilization of reservoirs by water birds was not established and should, therefore, be an important subject for further investigation.Keywords: Bottom Sediments; Total-N; Total-P; Tropical Reservoir; Waterbirds
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mwaura, Francis
spellingShingle Mwaura, Francis
Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
author_facet Mwaura, Francis
author_sort Mwaura, Francis
title Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
title_short Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
title_full Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
title_fullStr Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Bottom Sediment Chemistry, Nutrient Balance, and Water Birds in Small High Altitude Tropical Reservoirs in the Rift Valley, Kenya
title_sort bottom sediment chemistry, nutrient balance, and water birds in small high altitude tropical reservoirs in the rift valley, kenya
publisher Research and Extension Office, Haramaya University
publishDate 2015
url http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392
genre Ringed Plover
genre_facet Ringed Plover
op_source East African Journal of Sciences; Vol 8, No 2 (2014); 91-104
1992-0407
op_relation http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392/114926
http://www.ajol.info/index.php/eajsci/article/view/125392
10.4314/eajsci.v8i2.
op_rights Copyright is owned by the Haramaya University
_version_ 1766178997898575872