water
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Source: The map is published on UNEP's South Sudan: First State of Environment and Outlook Report 2018, using data from WCS. The UNEP's report could be found <a href="https://www.unenvironment.org/resources/report/south-sudan-first-state-environment-and-outlook-report-2018" target="_blank"> here </a> <br><br>The map shows the location and distribution of South Sudan’s principal wetlands, the most important of which are the Sudd and Machar swamps.
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Source: Bastiaanssen, W., Karimi, P., Rebelo, L.-M., Duan, Z., Senay, G., Muthuwatte, L., & et al. (6). (2014). Earth Observation Based Assessment of the Water Production and Water Consumption of Nile Basin Agro-Ecosystems. Remote Sensing, 6(11), 10306-10334. doi:10.3390/rs61110306 <br><br>The vast wetlands in Southern Sudan are characterised by huge evaporation rates from the Sudd, Bahr el Ghazal and the Sobat sub-basins (Mohamed, Bastiaanssen, & Savenije, 2004). About half of the flow into the White Nile is lost mainly to evaporation and transpiration in the wetlands of South Sudan (FAO, 2011) and approximately half of the Bahr el Jebel flow is lost to evaporation (NBI, 2016). In total, long-term evaporation is thought to account for water losses as high as 85 per cent of the total inflows into the Sudd wetlands (Senay, Velpur, Bohma, Demissie, & Gebremkhael, 2014). Analysis of the rate of water loss to evapotranspiration in the Sudd wetlands found that the central part of the Sudd (not counting the seasonally flooded pastures surrounding the wetlands) has evapotranspiration rates between 1,500 and 2,000 mm/yr.