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Dive into the research topics where D.W. Mulatu is active.

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Featured researches published by D.W. Mulatu.


Water Resources Management | 2013

The Effects of Groundwater and Surface Water Use on Total Water Availability and Implications for Water Management: The Case of Lake Naivasha, Kenya

Pieter R. van Oel; D.W. Mulatu; V.O. Odongo; Frank M. Meins; Rick J. Hogeboom; R. Becht; Alfred Stein; Japheth O. Onyando; Anne van der Veen

This study discusses the effects of water abstractions from two alternative sources on the available water volume around Lake Naivasha, Kenya: the lake itself and a connected aquifer. An estimation of the water abstraction pattern for the period 1999–2010 is made and its effect on the available water volume in Lake Naivasha and its connected aquifer is evaluated using a simple water balance modeling approach. This study shows that accurate estimates of annual volume changes of Lake Naivasha can be made using a simple monthly water balance approach that takes into account the exchange of water between the lake and its connected aquifer. The amount of water that is used for irrigation in the area around Lake Naivasha has a substantial adverse effect on the availability of water. Simulation results of our simple water balance model suggests that abstractions from groundwater affect the lake volume less than direct abstractions from the lake. Groundwater volumes, in contrast, are much more affected by groundwater abstractions and therefore lead to much lower groundwater levels. Moreover, when groundwater is used instead of surface water, evaporation losses from the lake are potentially higher due to a larger lake surface area. If that would be the case then the overall water availability in the area is more strongly affected by the abstraction of groundwater than by the abstraction of surface water. Therefore water managers should be cautious when using lake levels as the only indicator of water availability for restricting water abstractions.


International Journal of Water Resources Development | 2014

Supporting IWRM through spatial integrated assessment in the Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya

Pieter R. van Oel; V.O. Odongo; D.W. Mulatu; F.K. Muthoni; Jane Ndungu; Job Ochieng' Ogada; Anne van der Veen

This study describes the mismatch between required knowledge and efforts by scientists and stakeholders in the Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya. In the basin, integrated water resources management (IWRM) suffers from the absence of critically relevant knowledge. This study further presents a spatial integrated assessment framework for supporting IWRM in the basin. This framework resulted from an ongoing debate between stakeholders and scientists studying the basins issues. It builds on jointly identified indicators for sustainable governance, and their interdependency, and knowledge gaps. For IWRM in the basin this is a first important step towards a more structured debate on the implementation of IWRM.


Water International | 2015

Firms’ willingness to invest in a water fund to improve water-related ecosystem services in the Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya

D.W. Mulatu; Pieter R. van Oel; Anne van der Veen

A valuation scenario was designed using a contingent-valuation approach and presented to decision makers in business firms in Kenya’s Lake Naivasha basin to test how applicable a water fund might be as a potential financing mechanism for a payment for water-related ecosystem services scheme. The findings indicate that measuring a firm’s willingness to invest in ecosystem services could help determine whether a firm would invest and engage with other stakeholders to pool their investments in ecosystem services. Linking the institutional decision-making behaviour of a firm and its willingness to invest in a water fund is the novelty of this article.


Journal of Hydrology | 2014

Coupling socio-economic factors and eco-hydrological processes using a cascade-modeling approach

V.O. Odongo; D.W. Mulatu; F.K. Muthoni; P.R. van Oel; F.M. Meins; C. van der Tol; Andrew K. Skidmore; T.A. Groen; R. Becht; Japheth O. Onyando; A. van der Veen


Ecosystem services | 2014

Farm households' preferences for collective and individual actions to improve water-related ecosystem services: The Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya

D.W. Mulatu; A. van der Veen; P.R. van Oel


Journal of settlements and spatial planning | 2013

Accounting for spatial non - stationairty to estimate population distribution using land use / cover : case study : the Lake Naivasha Basin, Kenya

D.W. Mulatu; A. van der Veen; R. Becht; P.R. van Oel; D.J. Bekalo


Proceedings of Water Management Issues in Africa : Scientific conference of the NASAC-KNAW collaboration initiative in collaboration with MAST and Leopoldina on 28-31 March 2012, Réduit, Mauritius. | 2012

An earth observation and integrated assessment (EOIA) approach for the sustainable governance of a socio - ecological system : the case of the Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya

van P.R. Oel; V.O. Odongo; D.W. Mulatu; J.N. Ndungu; F.K. Muthoni; J. Ogada; G. Khroda; J. Mathooko; R. Becht; N. Kitaka; Japheth O. Onyando; van der A. Veen


IGS - SENSE Conference 2011: Resilient Societies - Governing Risk and Vulnerability: for Water, Energy and Climate Change | 2011

The spatial non - stationarity of population - land use - cover relationships in Lake Naivasha basin: an application of Geographically Weighted Regression, GWR

D.W. Mulatu; A. van der Veen; R. Becht; P.R. van Oel; D.J. Bekalo


Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management | 2018

Fishing community preferences and willingness to pay for alternative developments of ecosystem-based fisheries management (EBFM) for Lake Naivasha, Kenya

D.W. Mulatu; Pieter R. van Oel; Vincent Odongo; Anne van der Veen


Environmental Modeling & Assessment | 2018

Using Data on Social Influence and Collective Action for Parameterizing a Geographically-Explicit Agent-Based Model for the Diffusion of Soil Conservation Efforts

P.R. van Oel; D.W. Mulatu; V.O. Odongo; Daniel Kyalo Willy; A. van der Veen

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R. Becht

University of Twente

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Pieter R. van Oel

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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