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      <ref-type name="Book Section">5</ref-type>
      <work-type>OS CH : Chapitres d'ouvrages scientifiques</work-type>
      <contributors>
        <authors>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Nguimalet, C.R</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="bold" font="default" size="100%">Orange, Didier</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Waterendji, J.P.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Yambele, A.</style>
          </author>
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        <secondary-authors>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Tshimanga, R.M.</style>
          </author>
          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Moukandi N'kaya, G.D.</style>
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          <author>
            <style face="normal" font="default" size="100%">Alsdorf, D.</style>
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      <titles>
        <title>Hydroclimatic dynamics of upstream Ubangi river at Mobaye, Central African Republic : comparative study of the role of savannah and equatorial forest</title>
        <secondary-title>Congo basin hydrology, climate, and biogeochemistry : a foundation for the future</secondary-title>
        <tertiary-title>Geophysical Monograph</tertiary-title>
      </titles>
      <pages>83-96</pages>
      <keywords>
        <keyword>PRECIPITATION</keyword>
        <keyword>REGIME HYDROLOGIQUE</keyword>
        <keyword>PLUVIOMETRIE</keyword>
        <keyword>DEBIT</keyword>
        <keyword>VARIATION ANNUELLE</keyword>
        <keyword>SECHERESSE</keyword>
        <keyword>RUISSELLEMENT</keyword>
        <keyword>AQUIFERE</keyword>
        <keyword>ETUDE COMPARATIVE</keyword>
        <keyword>COUVERT VEGETAL</keyword>
        <keyword>SAVANE</keyword>
        <keyword>FORET DENSE</keyword>
        <keyword>COURS D'EAU</keyword>
        <keyword>BASSIN VERSANT</keyword>
        <keyword>SERIE CHRONOLOGIQUE</keyword>
        <keyword>CHANGEMENT CLIMATIQUE</keyword>
        <keyword>1938 2015</keyword>
        <keyword>CENTRAFRIQUE</keyword>
        <keyword>OUBANGUI COURS D'EAU</keyword>
        <keyword>MOBAYE</keyword>
        <keyword>KOTTO COURS D'EAU</keyword>
        <keyword>KEMBE</keyword>
        <keyword>BRIA</keyword>
        <keyword>MBOMU COURS D'EAU</keyword>
        <keyword>BANGASSOU</keyword>
        <keyword>ZEMIO</keyword>
        <keyword>UELE COURS D'EAU</keyword>
        <keyword>BILI COURS D'EAU</keyword>
      </keywords>
      <dates>
        <year>2022</year>
      </dates>
      <pub-location>Washington (USA) ; Hoboken</pub-location>
      <publisher>AGU ; Wiley</publisher>
      <call-num>fdi:010087867</call-num>
      <language>ENG</language>
      <number>269</number>
      <electronic-resource-num>10.1002/9781119657002.ch6</electronic-resource-num>
      <urls>
        <related-urls>
          <url>https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010087867</url>
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          <url>https://www.documentation.ird.fr/intranet/publi/2023-10/010087867.pdf</url>
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      <abstract>The rainfall reduction in the 1970s, less marked in Central Africa than in West Africa, still had a major impact on the hydrological regimes of the region's large rivers. The study of the hydropluviometric behavior of the Ubangi River at Mobaye  has the advantage of being a study of a basin excluding anthropogenic impact. Forest cover and population density have not changed since at least 1970. Statistical analysis of the breaks in the long rainfall time series to Mobaye (1938-2015) confirms a long period of drought from 1969 to 2006, corresponding to a reduction of 8% in rainfall. Also, the study of the corresponding hydrological series indicates a second downward break in 1981, marking an exceptional hydrological drought.  Flows increased in 2013, a few years after the rainfall increase. The statistical study of the annual rainfall/flow series of the upstream basins over the period 1951-1995 (the Kotto River in Kembe and Bria, the Mbomu River in Bangassou and Zemio, and the Uele River + Bili hydrographic system) highlights different hydrological behaviors related to the vegetation cover. On the one hand, the savannah basins show a continuous hydrological deficit marked by a runoff coefficient (CE) that fell to only 5% from the 1990s.  On the other hand, the basins under forest show a runoff increase since 1990, marked by a CE above 10%. Under savannah, the part of the flow infiltrating to recharge the aquifer would have decreased faster than under forest, which results in a runoff CE very significantly negatively correlated with the savannah area present in the studied watershed.</abstract>
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