About this Research Topic
Water harvesting is being widely practiced by local communities, NGOs and local governments as a response to unreliable rainfall and a changing climate. Techniques are often cited as being cost-effective and easy to manage without much of an evidence base. Evaluations of techniques against hydraulic, hydrogeological, social or economic criteria are infrequent. This topic will gather together research papers from a variety of disciplines to present a holistic understanding of water harvesting practices. These will come from drylands across the world. Some will be indigenous, some will have been developed and implemented only recently; some will provide water for a single household, some for a whole city.
In this Research Topic, we seek manuscripts on the following topics:
• Conceptual and numerical models of water harvesting structures (surface water or groundwater);
• Impact of water harvesting on the health and wellbeing of local communities;
• Economic assessment of water harvesting;
• Water quality implications of water harvesting;
• South-South transfer of water harvesting techniques.
Keywords: Rainwater Harvesting, Semi-Arid, Managed Aquifer Recharge, Water Resources, Community Water Supply
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.