Hamun Lake
Hāmūn-e Helmand | ||
---|---|---|
Primary inflows Helmand River | | |
Basin countries | Afghanistan / Iran | |
Official name | Hamun-e-Saberi & Hamun-e-Helmand | |
Designated | 23 June 1975 | |
Reference no. | 42[1] |
Lake Hāmūn (
The Hamun is fed by numerous seasonal water tributaries; the main tributary is the perennial Helmand River, which originates in the Hindu Kush mountains in Afghanistan. In modern times, and prior to the existence of the dams for agricultural irrigation, spring floods would bring into existence much larger lakes.[3]
Geography
It is located in Afghanistan on the
It used to cover an area of about 4,000 km2 (1,500 sq mi) with dense reed beds and
A trapezoid-shaped basalt outcropping, known as Mount Khajeh,[6] rises up as an island in the middle of which used to be Hāmūn Lake and the northeastern edge of Hāmūn-e Helmand. Its flat-topped peak rises up 609 meters above sea level with a diameter of 2–2.5 km (1.2–1.6 mi), being the only remaining natural uplift in the Sīstān flatlands.
Hamun Lake is sometimes categorized as three sibling shallow lakes, that is, Hamun-e Helmand,
Lake Hāmūn is fed primarily by water catchments on the Afghan side, including the
When droughts occur in Afghanistan, or the water in watersheds that support Lake Hāmūn is drawn down by other natural or human-induced reasons, the result is a dry lake bed in Iran. In addition, when the lake is dry, seasonal winds blow fine sands off the exposed lake bed. The sand is swirled into huge dunes that may cover a hundred or more fishing villages along the former lakeshore. Wildlife around the lake is negatively impacted and fisheries are brought to a halt. Changes in water policies and substantial rains in the region hope to effect a return of much of the water in Lake Hamoun by 2003.[8]
In 1975 the hāmūn, together with Hāmūn-e Sabari, was designated a Ramsar site.[9]
History
Archeological sites
The area has important archeological remains. The giant prehistoric city of
In 1975 the
Irrigation
In the past five millennia, people have lived around Hamoun Oasis and its wetlands and their wildlife. Specific culture formed around the Hamoun with a way of life suited to the desert wetlands. They fashioned long reed boats to navigate the shallow waters and erected squat, red clay houses to withstand the heat of the desert. Their livelihood was based almost entirely on hunting, fishing, and farming.
Until the late 20th century, irrigation waxed and waned in the Sīstān Basin for over 4,000 years without destroying the wetlands, but then population rapidly increased and new water management technologies were brought to the region. Soon irrigation schemes began to snake their way throughout the basin. Farther west, revolving Afghan governments constructed large dams (Arghandab Dam, Kajaki Dam) that diverted water from the upper reaches of the river.[4]
Devastation by extreme droughts in 1999-2001
Precipitation variability in the Hindu Kush results in alternating periods of flooding in the Helmand and droughts, which may cause entire lagoons to dry up. This occurred several times in the 20th century when only the uppermost of the lakes remained flooded. Landsat satellite imagery show how dramatic decrease in precipitation resulted in decrease of snow-covered area in the Helmand Basin, from 41,000 km2 in 1998 to 26,000 km2 in 2000. By 2001, Iran and Afghanistan were experienced for the third consecutive year an extreme drought that was so severe that the Hamoun dried out completely.[5]
Sīstān's population, swelled by refugees from war-torn Afghanistan, has been severely affected by water shortages. Irrigation channels have run dry and agriculture has come to a standstill, which has resulted in the abandonment of many villages as people migrate in search of water.[5]
Combination of drought and the massive irrigation proved to be a shock to the wetlands. Within five years period (1998-2002) once fertile wetlands rapidly deteriorated. We could reasonably presume that transformation of Hamoun into arid country, like their surrounding areas, was mainly caused by irrigated agriculture expansion since the 1970s (represent as bright red patches on satellite images, mainly wheat and barley), coupled with one of the worst droughts ever witnessed in Central Asia in 1999-2001 period.
The wetlands have been replaced mostly by lifeless salt flats and decaying reed stands. The wildlife, the towns, the fisheries, and the agriculture that once surrounded the Hamoun have all fallen away, giving rise to a wasteland.[4]
Winds that were once cooled by the waters of the wetlands now drifting dust, sand, and salt from the dried lakebeds onto the surrounding villages, and these sand drifts have submerged nearly 100 villages beneath dunes in a landscape reminiscent of the Aral Sea disaster. Most of the crops have been reduced to dust bowl conditions, livestock herds have been decimated, and thriving fishery with an annual catch of around 12,000 tons has been wiped out. Many who had lived around the Hamoun for generations either moved away or lost everything.
Local bird population disappeared and migratory birds no longer stop for lack of refuge, and wildlife that could not sustain themselves in the desert or make the long journey to another oasis died.[4][5] The rest of the wetlands now give off the harsh glare of dried salt flats. The only relatively large bodies of standing water are Chāh-Nīmeh IV reservoir maintained for drinking water.[5]
See also
Notes
- ^ "Hamun-e-Saberi & Hamun-e-Helmand". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
- ^ a b "GeoNames.org". www.geonames.org. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
- ^ Editorial Staff (2020-04-01). "Lake Hamun Biosphere Reserve & Life in It". Destination Iran Tours. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
- ^ a b c d e Weier 2002
- ^ a b c d e Partov 1998
- ^ Mount Khajeh is named after an Islamic pilgrimage site on the hill: the tomb and shrine of Khwaja Ali Mahdi, descendant of Alī ibn Abī Ṭālib
- ^ Editorial Staff (2020-04-01). "Lake Hamun Biosphere Reserve & Life in It". Destination Iran Tours. Retrieved 2020-07-29.
- ^ UNEP 2006
- ^ a b "Ramsar sites database". wetlands.org. Archived from the original on 23 February 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
- ^ "- Center for Afghanistan Studies - University of Nebraska Omaha". www.unomaha.edu. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
References
- Kobori, Iwao; Glantz, Michael H., eds. (1998), "Chapter 9 - Iranian perspectives on the Caspian Sea and Central Asia: #The issue of Lake Hamun and the Hirmand River", Central Eurasian water crisis: Caspian, Aral, and Dead Seas: Part III: The Caspian Sea, United Nations University Press, ISBN 92-808-0925-3, archived from the originalon 2010-05-28, retrieved 2010-08-31
- Partov, Hassan (1998), Lake Hamoun, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP): DEWA/GRID Europe, archived from the original on 2018-10-21, retrieved 2010-09-24
- Weier, John (2002-12-03), From Wetland to Wasteland; Destructuion of the Hamoun Oasis, NASA Earth Observatory, retrieved 2010-09-24
- UNEP (May 2006), History of Environmental Change in the Sistan Basin - Based on Satellite Image Analysis: 1976–2005 (PDF), Geneva: United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Post-Conflict Branch, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-07, retrieved 2007-07-20
External links
- Media related to Lake Hāmūn at Wikimedia Commons