desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

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Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

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Page 1: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Desertification: is the process by which land

becomes desert

Page 2: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Case study: the Sahel

• The Sahel is becoming more like desert with thin, dry, sandy soils

• Soil erosion has created bare rock

• Vegetation is sparse

Page 3: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

The UN environment programme took up combating desertification as a major part of its work.

In the 1990s it argued that desertification threatened nearly a quarter of the Earth’s land surface.

Page 4: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

How have each of these factors contributed to desertification?

desertification

climate humans animals

Page 5: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Climate• Drought: low rainfall since 1968.

• Soils become dry and there is no water left in wells.

• Trees die, grass withers and is replaced by poor desert scrub.

• Crops fail and cattle feed on poor pasture.

• Less roots to protect the topsoil, less humus; soils become more sandy and dry.

• Wind erosion removes the soil, causing dust storms, leaving bare rock.

Page 6: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Human activity• Population is high and

increasing fast.

• To increase food supplies more crops are grown and more cattle kept leading to over-cultivation and over-grazing.

• Yields decline and cattle are undernourished and die.

• Demand increases for water as population grows.

• Trees are cut down for fuel supplies.

• Less vegetation; more dry, bare soil; more wind erosion.

Page 7: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Animals/insects

• Locusts destroy the crops.

• Overgrazing means all vegetation is eaten.

• Animals trample the ground reducing it to dust.

• Animals die and can’t breed.

Page 8: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

What are the effects of desertification?

Page 9: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Starvation

• Food and water shortages lead to malnutrition, famine, disease and high death rates.

Page 10: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert
Page 11: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Aid Programmes

Large numbers of people become dependent on food aid programmes.

Page 12: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Migration

• From rural to urban areas causing over-population in towns.

• To refugee camps.

Page 13: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Solutions?

How can we solve the problems of desertification?

Page 14: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Solutions• In the short-term, provide food aid and water supplies to

prevent suffering.

• Improve water supplies by building large reservoirs and drilling deeper wells.

• Conserve water in local small-scale schemes eg ‘magic stones’ in Burkino Faso.

• Encourage sustainable farming practices (using locally-made tools, not tractors).

• Provide drought-resistant seed such as millet (northern Nigeria). GM crops.

• Tree planting schemes to reduce soil erosion (Mauritania).

• International action to reduce the causes of global warming.

Page 15: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Solving the Problems: the results

Nov 1992

Nov 1998

Before and after animals have overgrazed and trampled the savanna.

Page 16: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Solving the Problems: the results

Before

After

Which scheme do you think solved these problems?

Page 17: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Conservation ProjectsEden FoundationFounded 1985 in Sweden

Niger is one of the driest countries in the world, situated south of the Sahara desert. The people are poor and have neither money nor water to spare.

• Their solution is to bring trees and bushes that can grow naturally in this dry area and give food, even in times of need.

• There are 250,000 known plant species in the world, but only 20 of them provide 90% of our food so the Eden Foundation grow underexploited, edible trees and bushes to feed the local people.

• Since their arrival, Eden has served more than 2500 households in the region.

• The seeds are free and they show the local people how to grow the seed.

• They also give health advice.

Page 18: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Eden Foundation

"Thanks to our Eden trees, we've had food to eat even though the millet failed. For the last three years, we haven't had a single good rain in our village and this year's harvest lasted less than a month. Instead, my family has lived from the Eden fruits on our field which gives us food for the day. We depend on it, for there is nothing else to eat around here."

- Musa Abari from Garin Farara

Page 19: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Charity Events

Band Aid:

20th Anniversary raising money for the victims of famine and starvation.

Trying to cancel ‘Third world’ debt.

           

Midge Ure and Sir Bob Goldolf

Page 20: Desertification: is the process by which land becomes desert

Problems?• Civil wars, as in

Ethiopia and Sudan prevent aid reaching stricken areas and cause mass migration to refugee camps.

• Population growth continues to outstrip food supplies.