Inventory of Estuarine and Lagoonal Ecosystems Subjected to Sand-Mining Activities in Southern Benin (West Africa)
Abstract
Sand is a useful resource for the development of any society. As such, the issues
related to its extraction are everywhere present in Benin, especially in the
southern part of the country. For the purposes of eventually characterizing
those issues, the present study is undertaken with a focus on inventorying estuarine
and lagoonal ecosystems which are subjected to sand mining in
southern Benin. The study area covers both the Eastern Complex and the
Western Complex. The Eastern Complex includes the Porto-Novo Lagoon
and the Ouémé River delta; while the Western Complex includes the Coastal
Lagoon, the Aheme Lake along with its channels, and the Mono Basin. The
method used in this study is a systematic inventorying of all known and documented
sites as kept on record with relevant state offices in charge of the
management of those resources. Then, the data were completed by combing
the whole area for direct census observations and field interviews with stakeholders.
All inventoried sites have been geo-referenced using a GARMIN GPS
and their surface areas have been established. To date, 43 sand-mining sites
have been identified, of which 29 are located in the Oueme Delta and in the
Porto-Novo Lagoon, 8 are in the Coastal Lagoon, and 6 are in the Aheme
Lake and its channels as well as in the Mono River basin. The areas are small
in the Oueme Delta, where extraction is mostly manual, but get to be more
than 89-ha wide in other places such as the Coastal Lagoon where the process
is rather mechanized.
