Abstract

Given the critical role of water in rural development, it is essential to quantify water use by various sectors. Reportedly, a significant water loss during the dry monsoon phase is by Eucalyptus trees in the Ethiopian highlands but few quantitative studies have been carried out. In our study in the Fogera plain near Lake Tana, consumptive water use of a small Eucalyptus patch was calculated from the fluctuating diurnal water table observations for two dry monsoon phases. During the dry monsoon phase in 2014, the groundwater table declined linearly at a rate of 2.6 cm d−1 and in 2015 the decline was 2.5 cm d−1. Daily fluctuations in groundwater were around 20 cm. Translating changing groundwater levels in precise evapotranspiration rates was cumbersome because of uncertainty in the value of drainable porosity. We concluded that the evapotranspiration over the small Eucalyptus patch was at a minimum 3.4 mm d−1 but more likely around 10 mm d−1 at the end of the dry phase. The 10 mm d−1 is twice the reference evaporation rate. This is in accordance with advection aridity approach where the actual evaporation of isolated patches with access to groundwater in dry environments can evaporate at twice the reference rate. The current and future extent of Eucalyptus patches and forests need, therefore, be considered in the management of the groundwater resource.

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