deteriorating the water quality of Hartbeespoort Dam Hartbeespoort Dam has been renowned for its poor water quality since the mid-20th century. The dam suffers severe
eutrophication, in 2003 resulting from high phosphate and nitrate concentrations in the Crocodile River, the major inflow. The primary pollution sources are industrial and domestic effluent from Gauteng. The catchment area includes
Bruma lake in the
Jukskei River and
Centurion lake in the
Hennops River. This is caused by the growing level of dysfunction in the many sewage works that drain the city of Johannesburg, which, unusually for a large city, straddles a continental watershed instead of being located on a lake, river or seafront. Hartbeespoort Dam has become a robust example of the unintended consequence when an aquatic ecosystem flips from a stable but desirable state, into a stable but undesirable state, defying the best scientific interventions for decades. This is driven to a certain extent by the decline of data capture and processing systems that underpin water resource management in South Africa. The
South African Department of Water Affairs and Forestry launched the
Harties metsi a me (
Harties, My Water) programme to find solutions to the water quality problems. Budgeted government expenditure from 2004 to 2015 for the clean-up and rehabilitation of the dam and its catchment, and for related community projects, amounted to R900 million. Some biomanipulation methods applied to dams such as Hartbeespoort have come under scientific scrutiny. In 2020, the Rhodes University
Centre for Biological Control reared
Megamelus scutellaris and the water hyacinth
weevils
Neochetina eichhorniae and
N. bruchi en masse for biological control of the
water hyacinth at
dams in South Africa, including the Hartbeespoort Dam. == See also ==