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The Hydrology of the Congo Basin

23 April 2026 by
David Mokoli
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authors : Raphael M. TshimangaMark A. TriggMichel BechtoldVenkataramana SridharPhillip NegrelBenjamin KitamboGode Bola,Catherine Awidi MushiKechnit DjamelGuy MoukandiCyriaque NguimaletSebastian ApersAdrien ParisSly WongchuigAyan Santos FleischmannFabrice Papa & Paul Bates 

Link :  https://link.springer.com/rwe/10.1007/978-3-032-02023-9_5-1 

Abstract

The chapter provides a comprehensive review of the hydrology of the Congo River Basin (CRB), emphasizing its physical features, current data and models, hydrological processes, environmental pressures, and the evolving scientific understanding. Water resources of the CRB support vital ecosystem and societal services that include agriculture, fisheries, hydropower, navigation, water supply, biodiversity conservation, and maintenance of vulnerable ecosystems such as peatlands and flooded forests that are crucial for carbon storage and climate resilience. The CRB hydrology is shaped by its diverse physiographical and geomorphological features, linked through a complex river network encompassing wetlands, lakes, and groundwater systems. Connectivity between headwaters, the Cuvette Centrale, and major tributaries (Kasai, Lualaba, Oubangui, and Sangha) plays a central regulatory role. Our current understanding of these processes remains very limited, which restricts our ability to implement policies for water security and address the impacts of change on physical systems and society. Increasing pressures from deforestation, mining, land use, and climate change threaten hydrological stability, livelihoods, and ecosystem resilience. Heightened vulnerability to hydro-climatic extremes, such as floods, droughts, and landslides, and biological risks like Ebola outbreaks raises concerns of an approaching hydro-ecological tipping point. The chapter calls for urgent investment in monitoring networks, remote sensing, data integration, and predictive modeling to support sustainable water resources management and development. Fifteen major hydrological research challenges are identified, underscoring the need for robust scientific investment. Beyond the CRB, findings will enhance global understanding of tropical forest hydrology and reinforce the basin’s critical role in the Earth System.

David Mokoli 23 April 2026
 

Congo Basin Catchment Information System

CB-CIS

Congo Basin Integrated Water Resources Management Tool

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