Carpet characteristics of eichhornia crassipes [mart.] solms (water hyacinth) in the winam gulf (lake victoria, kenya)
Date
2017-07-31Author
Otieno, Wagai Samuel
Opande, George
Onyango, Charles
Musyimi, David
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The occurrence and spread of the water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes [Mart.] Solms),
in the Winam gulf has created numerous attributes to the human population that live
around the lake, thereby making its control a priority. Navigation within the lake is a
major economic activity that has been greatly affected. Before this study, little was
known about the characteristics of these weed carpets, and specifically the weight that a
healthy inter-connected or entangled carpet can support before it was able to sink or
even get submerged. Can a light herbivore or human stranded in the lake walk on a
healthy carpet to safety?. In order to better understand these unknown, a study was
initiated at five locations (i.e; Dunga beach, Kisumu pier, Kusa, Kobala and Kendu bay)
within the lake that appeared to contain healthy dense carpets. Carpet connectivity, mat
buoyancy, distribution of mass, biomass density, rhizome length and population density
were calculated. Carpet connectivity was determined as the difference in pressure when
weights were added on a mesh wire measuring 0.434m2 until the carpet submerged
and the pressure on the same carpet that was required to submerge it after a complete
disconnection. Standing population density was determined by counting the number of
plants found within quadrants measuring 1 m2; while biomass density was determined
when oven dried plant materials collected from quadrants measuring 1 m2 was
weighed. Plant mass and rhizome length measurements were correlated, while
population density was correlated to biomass density. These observations show that
water hyacinth distribution in the Winam gulf is seasonal and adopts residence in
secluded bays, carpets measuring 0,434m2 in size that have a connectivity of 288.4 Pa
(pascals) are able to support a weight of only 12.6 kg, with any additional weight
causing them to submerge. Distribution of mass was normal except in locations that are
subjected to external factors
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