Modeling‐based performance assessment of an indigenous macro‐catchment water harvesting technique (Marab) in the Jordanian Badia

Author:

Renzi Niccolò1,Villani Lorenzo12ORCID,Haddad Mira34ORCID,Strohmeier Stefan5,el Din Muhi3,Al Widyan Jaafar6,Bresci Elena1,Castelli Giulio178ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry (DAGRI) Università degli Studi di Firenze Florence Italy

2. Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering Department Vrije Universiteit Brussels (VUB) Brussels Belgium

3. Restoration Initiative on Dryland Ecosystem, Resilient Agrosilvopastoral Systems (RASP) International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) Amman Jordan

4. Geosciences, Department of Physical Geography Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

5. Department of Water, Atmosphere and Environment, Institute of Soil Physics and Rural Water Management University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna Austria

6. National Agricultural Research Center (NARC) Amman Jordan

7. UNESCO Chair in Hydropolitics University of Geneva Genève Switzerland

8. Environmental Governance and Territorial Development Hub (GEDT) University of Geneva Genève Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractWater resources management is fundamental for rural communities in drylands, where water harvesting technologies (WHT) can be used for intercepting surface runoff and storing water in soils. The so‐called “Marab” WHT was initially developed by Middle Eastern agro‐pastoralists that reside or commute in semi‐arid and arid rangelands. The Marab WHT is a macro‐catchment measure consisting of earth dams and stone spillways along the contours of a lowland depression or floodplain. Dependent on the local context (i.e., climate, soil, management, etc.), the established Marabs show highly variable effectiveness and little scientific evidence is supporting the scaling out of the technology. This study aims at filling the knowledge gap on the Marab performance in different environments by simulating its hydro‐agrological effects for different soils and climatic conditions using the AquaCrop model. A case study performed for a Jordanian Marab over three seasons (2019–2022) confirms its huge improvement potential for barley production. Through Marab‐based farming, barley production reached 8.37 t ha−1on average, versus highly variable 0.34 t ha−1without the WHT. The simulation‐based assessment of soil textures identified that silty soils have the largest potential for producing up to 9.25 t ha−1barley, compared to 6.60 t ha−1produced in clay soils. Assessing different climate scenarios, a slight increase in daily average temperatures (+0.5°C) led to a considerable production decline of 4%–8%, while a significant reduction of precipitation (−20%) decreased biomass production by a similar rate (4%–10%). This underlines the robustness of the “Marab” WHT to rainfall amount variation. However, simulations also highlight the sensitivity of timing and frequency of flood events: removing the last and the first flood event reduced biomass production by approximately 50% and 80%, respectively, while the barley fails to develop if both events were suppressed.

Funder

U.S. Forest Service

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science,General Environmental Science,Development,Environmental Chemistry

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