Authors
Gil Mahé, G Lienou, Luc Descroix, F Bamba, Jean-Emmanuel Paturel, Alain Laraque, M Meddi, H Habaieb, O Adeaga, Claudine Dieulin, F Chahnez Kotti, K Khomsi
Publication date
2013/7/15
Journal
Hydrological Processes
Volume
27
Issue
15
Pages
2105-2114
Description
In this paper, we study the impact of climate change on river regimes in several parts of Africa, and we look at the most probable causes of these changes either climatically or anthropogenically driven. We study time series of updated monthly and annual runoff of rivers of North Africa, West Africa (Sahelian and humid tropical regions) and Central Africa, including the largest river basins: Niger and Volta rivers in West Africa, and Congo and Ogooue rivers in Central Africa. The recent years are studied in the perspective of multi‐decadal variability. In West Africa and in a part of Central Africa, the climate has changed since 1970, and rainfall has not returned to previous annual amounts, except in Equatorial Africa. The consequences of the long‐lasting drought are, depending on the area concerned, the modification of seasonal regimes (Equatorial area), the groundwater table decrease (Tropical humid area) and the …
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Scholar articles
G Mahé, G Lienou, L Descroix, F Bamba, JE Paturel… - Hydrological Processes, 2013