“The assessment determined how different aspects of the socio-economic and ecosystem context react to the Pungwe basin’s flows and levels of water utilization”
says Mr. Elisha Madamombe, BUPUSACOM Interim Executive Secretary and IUCN-GEF BUPUSA Regional Project Coordinator.
In 2023, Global Water Partnership Southern Africa (GWPSA) commissioned an Environmental Flow (EFlows) assessment in the Pungwe Basin, aimed at identifying the driving processes and functioning of the river, estuary, and its ecosystems to understand their implications for the rivers, estuary, and nearshore ecosystems – their condition, ecological tipping points, and the services they provide to people. The study also assessed how various management approaches and water resource development scenarios might help deliver on the spirit and specifics of the Pungwe Basin Agreement. The assessment was conducted under the GEF- Funded USD 6 million “Management of Competing Water Uses and Associated Ecosystems in Pungwe, Buzi, and Save Basins ” Project, being implemented in the Buzi, Pungwe, and Save (BUPUSA) river basins by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), with Global Water Partnership Southern Africa (GWPSA) as the regional executing Partner.
The assessment established that the levels of water use in the basin are well below the annual average yield and that there is scope to develop the water resources of the basin without seriously compromising ecosystem functions and biodiversity.
The Basin monograph reported several bird species with threatened global concern status and more than 15 broad vegetation types (including mangroves) in the Pungwe Basin, with 3 of these being of conservation concern that are directly reliant on regular water flow. The two main protected conservation areas within the Pungwe Basin are Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique and Nyanga National Park in Zimbabwe. Most of the large mammals common to southern Africa exist in Gorongosa.
Cold-water species of fish dominate the upper parts of the river, where the water is mostly clear and of low productivity, while warm-water and marine fish species become more common in the lower reaches of the Pungwe.
The EFlows assessment also identified the Nhandugue River, the Urema catchment, and the Nhandare River as high biological diversity areas that should be prioritized for protection and maintained in near-natural conditions to support migratory species and other ecosystem processes.