Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes

A group of >80 crater lakes associated with the East African Rift System in western Uganda provide important water resources to rural communities, alongside opportunities for aquaculture and tourism. The lakes are impacted by, and face increasing pressure from human activities such as land use ch...

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Main Author: Hunt, Laura Hazel
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76150/
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author Hunt, Laura Hazel
author_facet Hunt, Laura Hazel
author_sort Hunt, Laura Hazel
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description A group of >80 crater lakes associated with the East African Rift System in western Uganda provide important water resources to rural communities, alongside opportunities for aquaculture and tourism. The lakes are impacted by, and face increasing pressure from human activities such as land use change and climate change. These issues are exacerbated by the region’s high population growth rate and low levels of water infrastructure. To help inform future management of the lakes, this research aimed to understand the hydrology of the crater lakes, their sensitivity to hydroclimate forcing, and the nature and drivers of hydrological change over the past few centuries. In this thesis contemporary lake water isotope data from the region and isotope mass balance models are used show that while the lakes are generally evaporative systems sensitive to changes in the ratio of precipitation to evaporation, groundwater forms a substantial proportion of the hydrological budgets. This is particularly the case in two of the study sites, Lakes Kasenda and Nyungu. Sensitivity analysis of the isotope mass balance models show that Lake Kasenda, which is volumetrically smaller and has a shorter lake water residence time, with a smaller proportion of their hydrological budgets comprised of groundwater, is more sensitive to climate forcing then Lake Nyungu. In the absence of long-term limnological monitoring, authigenic carbonate
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:58:48Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:58:48Z
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spelling nottingham-761502024-01-31T13:34:05Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76150/ Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes Hunt, Laura Hazel A group of >80 crater lakes associated with the East African Rift System in western Uganda provide important water resources to rural communities, alongside opportunities for aquaculture and tourism. The lakes are impacted by, and face increasing pressure from human activities such as land use change and climate change. These issues are exacerbated by the region’s high population growth rate and low levels of water infrastructure. To help inform future management of the lakes, this research aimed to understand the hydrology of the crater lakes, their sensitivity to hydroclimate forcing, and the nature and drivers of hydrological change over the past few centuries. In this thesis contemporary lake water isotope data from the region and isotope mass balance models are used show that while the lakes are generally evaporative systems sensitive to changes in the ratio of precipitation to evaporation, groundwater forms a substantial proportion of the hydrological budgets. This is particularly the case in two of the study sites, Lakes Kasenda and Nyungu. Sensitivity analysis of the isotope mass balance models show that Lake Kasenda, which is volumetrically smaller and has a shorter lake water residence time, with a smaller proportion of their hydrological budgets comprised of groundwater, is more sensitive to climate forcing then Lake Nyungu. In the absence of long-term limnological monitoring, authigenic carbonate 2023-12-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76150/1/Laura%20Hunt%20PhD%20Thesis_corrections.pdf Hunt, Laura Hazel (2023) Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. palaeolimnology; hydrological change; hydrology; stable isotopes; proxy system model; Uganda; lakes
spellingShingle palaeolimnology; hydrological change; hydrology; stable isotopes; proxy system model; Uganda; lakes
Hunt, Laura Hazel
Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title_full Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title_fullStr Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title_full_unstemmed Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title_short Ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
title_sort ugandan crater lakes: inferring hydrological change using stable isotopes
topic palaeolimnology; hydrological change; hydrology; stable isotopes; proxy system model; Uganda; lakes
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76150/