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{{Infobox settlement
[[Image:Bolivia department of cochabamba.png|thumb|285px|Location in the [[Cochabamba Department]]]]
<!--See the Table at Infobox Settlement for all fields and descriptions of usage-->
'''Punata''' is a [[province]] in the [[Cochabamba Department]], [[Bolivia]].
<!-- Basic info ---------------->
|official_name = Punata Province
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|settlement_type = Province
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<!-- images and maps ----------->
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|image_caption = Peach orchard in [[San Benito, Cochabamba|San Benito]]
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|image_map = Bolivia Cochabamba Punata.png
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|map_caption = Location of the Punata Province within Bolivia
|image_map1 = Bolivia department of cochabamba.png
|mapsize1 = 250px
|map_caption1 = Provinces of the Cochabamba Department
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|pushpin_map_caption =Location of San Rafael within Bolivia
<!-- Location ------------------>
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|subdivision_name = [[Image:Flag of Bolivia.svg|25px]] [[Bolivia]]
|subdivision_type1 = [[Departments of Bolivia|Department]]
|subdivision_name1 = [[Cochabamba]]
<!-- Smaller parts (e.g. boroughs of a city) and seat of government -->
|seat_type = Capital
|seat = [[Punata]]
<!-- Politics ----------------->
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|established_title = <!-- Settled -->
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<!-- Area --------------------->
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<!-- Population ----------------------->
|population_as_of = 2024 census
|population_footnotes = <ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.citypopulation.de/en/bolivia/dept/admin/ | title=Bolivia: Administrative divisions | publisher=City Population | access-date=11 September 2024}}</ref>
|population_note =
|population_total = 61,382
|population_density_km2 = auto
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|population_blank1_title =Ethnicities
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<!-- General information --------------->
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'''Punata''' is a [[Provinces of Bolivia|province]] almost in the middle of the [[Cochabamba Department]], [[Bolivia]], located about 45&nbsp;km south of the city of [[Cochabamba]]. Its capital is [[Punata]]. The province is limited to the north by the [[Chapare Province]], to the north-east by the [[Tiraque Province]], to the east by the [[Arani Province]], to the south-east by the [[Mizque Province]], to the south by the [[Esteban Arce Province|Esteban Arze Province]] and to the west by the [[Germán Jordán Province]].
{{Bolivia-geo-stub}}


Its archaeological and historical sites are the main interest for foreign tourists.
{{coord|17|35|S|66|15|W|type:ad2min|display=title}}


== Subdivision ==
[[Category:Provinces of Bolivia]]
[[File:Mapa politico punata.JPG|thumb|left|160px|Political map of Punata Province]]
Punata Province is divided into five [[Municipalities of Bolivia|municipalities]] which are partly further subdivided into cantons.


{|class="wikitable" border="1" style="width:40%;" border="1"
[[de:Punata (Provinz)]]
|-bgcolor=silver
[[es:Punata (provincia)]]
!Section
[[fr:Province de Punata]]
!Municipality
[[nl:Punata (provincie)]]
!Seat
[[pt:Punata]]
|-
[[qu:Punata pruwinsya]]
| 1st || [[Punata Municipality]] || [[Punata]]
|-
| 2nd || [[Villa Rivero Municipality]] or [[Muela Municipality]] || [[Villa Rivero]]
|-
| 3rd || [[San Benito Municipality]] <br /> or Villa José Quintín Mendoza Municipality || [[San Benito, Cochabamba|San Benito]]
|-
| 4th || [[Tacachi Municipality]] || [[Tacachi]]
|-
| 5th || [[Cuchumuela Municipality]] <br /> or [[Villa Gualberto Villarroel Municipality]] || [[Cuchumuela]]
|-
|}

== The people ==
The people are predominantly [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous]] citizens of [[Quechuas|Quechuan]] descent. By 2001 census was counted 47735 inhabitants and it rose to 54409 inhabitants by the 2012 census. The economic center is the city of Punata with 28707 inhabitants.

{|class="wikitable" border="1" style="width:45%;" border="1"
|-bgcolor=#EFEFEF
! '''Ethnic group'''
! '''Punata Municipality (%)'''
! '''Villa Rivero Municipality (%)'''
! '''San Benito Municipality (%)'''
! '''Tacachi Municipality (%)'''
! '''Cuchumuela Municipality (%)'''
|-
|[[Quechuas|Quechua]]
|align="right" |76.2
|align="right" |93.8
|align="right" |87.1
|align="right" |92.9
|align="right" |94.3
|-
|[[Aymara people|Aymara]]
|align="right" |0.8
|align="right" |0.1
|align="right" |0.6
|align="right" |0.1
|align="right" |0.4
|-
|[[Guarani people|Guaraní]], [[Chiquitos]], [[Moxos people|Moxos]]
|align="right" |0.1
|align="right" |0.0
|align="right" |0.1
|align="right" |0.0
|align="right" |0.2
|-
|Not [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous]]
|align="right" |22.7
|align="right" |6.0
|align="right" |12.1
|align="right" |7.0
|align="right" |4.9
|-
|Other indigenous groups
|align="right" |0.2
|align="right" |0.0
|align="right" |0.1
|align="right" |0.0
|align="right" |0.2
|-
|}
<small>Ref: obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo</small>

== Languages ==
The languages spoken in the Punata Province are mainly [[Quechua languages|Quechua]] and [[Spanish language|Spanish]]. The following table shows the number of those belonging to the recognized group of speakers.<ref>[http://obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo/departamental/fichas/ obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090218081358/http://obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo/departamental/fichas/ |date=2009-02-18 }} (Spanish)</ref>

{|class="wikitable" border="1" style="width:45%;" border="1"
|-bgcolor=silver
! '''Language'''
! '''Punata Municipality'''
! '''Villa Rivero Municipality'''
! '''San Benito Municipality'''
! '''Tacachi Municipality'''
! '''Cuchumuela Municipality'''
|-
|[[Quechua languages|Quechua]]
|align="right" |21,255
|align="right" |5,387
|align="right" |10,529
|align="right" |953
|align="right" |1,767
|-
|[[Aymara language|Aymara]]
|align="right" |256
|align="right" |16
|align="right" |94
|align="right" |4
|align="right" |3
|-
|[[Guaraní language|Guaraní]]
|align="right" |25
|align="right" |4
|align="right" |9
|align="right" |1
|align="right" |1
|-
|Another native
|align="right" |22
|align="right" |7
|align="right" |6
|align="right" |0
|align="right" |1
|-
|[[Spanish language|Spanish]]
|align="right" |20,797
|align="right" |3,394
|align="right" |9,650
|align="right" |674
|align="right" |851
|-
|Foreign
|align="right" |148
|align="right" |14
|align="right" |48
|align="right" |3
|align="right" |1
|-
|Only native
|align="right" |4,232
|align="right" |2,201
|align="right" |2,450
|align="right" |350
|align="right" |968
|-
|Native and Spanish
|align="right" |17,096
|align="right" |3,194
|align="right" |8,105
|align="right" |603
|align="right" |801
|-
|Only Spanish
|align="right" |3,703
|align="right" |200
|align="right" |1,545
|align="right" |71
|align="right" |50
|-
|}

==Irrigation of the alluvial fan of Punata==
[[Image:PunataFan.png|thumb|300px| The large alluvial fan of Punata, near Cochabamba, Bolivia. The watershed is located in the Andes mountain range.]]

Reference: ''The Punata-Tiraque irrigation project near Cochabamba, Bolivia''<ref>R.J. Sevenhuijsen, R.J. Oosterbaan and K. Zijderveld, 1988. ''The Punata-Tiraque irrigation project near Cochabamba, Bolivia.'' International Institute for Land Reclamation and Improvement (ILRI), Wageningen, The Netherlands. Public Domain. On line: [http://www.waterlog.info/pdf/punata.pdf]</ref>

The alluvial fan of Punata in the ''Valle Alto'' is fed by The ''Rio Paracaya'' river with a high average discharge. Consequently, the fan is fairly flat.

The region of Punata, at the upper end of the Valle Alto, at about 2800 m altitude, has a summer rainfall of 400 to 450&nbsp;mm starting in the second half of November end ending in March. [[Maize]] is here the most important food crop, followed by [[potatoes]]. [[Alfalfa]] is the dominant fodder crop, followed by maize straw. (Fig. P1). These crops could, of old, only be planted successfully because of the existence of additional water resources like [[Surface runoff|runoff]], floods, river base-flow and [[groundwater]]. In the winter months, crop growth is restricted due to the occurrence of night frosts, especially in June and July, and absence of rains.

The total rural population in Punata is estimated at 25 000. There are about 4000 families of which an estimated 3680 are farmer families. The [[farm]]s are small. The average size is 1.3 ha of which 1 ha is cropped. The modal size of farm is smaller, about 0.7 ha.

The [[rainfall]] distribution in Punata is characterized by a wet season from December to March, a [[dry season]] from May to October, and transition months in April and November. The average yearly total is 428&nbsp;mm (1966 to 1983, San Benito). The rainfall with a [[probability]] of exceedance of 75% (R75) on a year basis is 360&nbsp;mm. Rainfall is not reliable: in the period from 1966 to 1983, the yearly total varied between 246&nbsp;mm (1982/83) to 591&nbsp;mm (1968/69).

The river floods during the rainy summer period can be used for irrigation by anyone who wants to. When the river flow recedes, the stream can only be used for rotational irrigation by those who are entitled to take part in it (this is locally called the ''mita'' system). By the month of May the river base-flow becomes strongly reduced, and a drought period sets in, lasting into November.

[[Surface irrigation|Irrigation]] is considered desirable to start the cropping season in August/September, so that an early [[harvest]] can be obtained. The early harvest has a high market value and reduces peak labor requirements. Further, the irrigation reduces the risk of crop failure and it permits diversification of [[agriculture|agricultural]] produce. Nevertheless, there are some farming communities that have refrained in the past from the extra effort to obtain additional irrigation water and who seemed to be content with purely rain-fed cropping.

At a modest scale, irrigation from deep-wells is also practiced.

In order to satisfy the needs of the majority of the farmers who strongly wish to have additional irrigation water, the irrigation project Punata-Tiraque began to be developed from 1970 onwards. The project entailed the construction of a complicated system of [[dam]]s and reservoirs up in the [[Andes|Andean mountains]] (Fig. P2).

The gross area of the Punata projects is estimated at 4600 ha, 90% of which can be used for agriculture or animal husbandry. About 1150 ha of this presently receive irrigation water, either surface water derived from the ''Laguna Robada'' or ''Lluska Kocha'' dam, or water pumped from the 16 deep wells in the project area (estimated at 350 ha). In addition there are a few hundred hectares that receive occasional water from ''mita'' irrigation (wild flooding).

The traditional irrigation method is based on handling large irrigation flows (''golpes'') per farm at large intervals. The intake structures in the ''Pucara Mayu'' river, at the place where it enters the alluvial fan of Punata, would alternately pass water from each of the reservoir systems (''Laguna Robada'' and ''Lluska Kocha / Muyu Loma'') and the natural ''mita'' water. The new system has been designed for smaller flows with shorter rotation intervals, but it works continuously for the whole area, so that there is no need anymore to separate the various sources of water. It covers a much larger area than the traditional system and it incorporates the associations of the ''mita'' systems (which may have partly the same members), the associations of tube-well systems (which may also have partly the same members) as well as the persons who had no previous water rights.

Hence, the new irrigation system makes it necessary to replace the traditional water rights by a totally new set of rights (and duties). In addition, the farmers will have to get used to new water distribution methods and new field irrigation techniques. Because the new irrigation zones do not correspond to the boundaries of the existing, scattered, ''Comité’s de Riego'' (Fig. P3), not only the water management but also the organizational structure will have to be adjusted to the new situation.

<gallery caption="Illustrations of the Punata alluvial fan" perrow="2" widths="350" heights="200">
Image:PunataCropping.JPG|Fig. P1. Typical cropping calendar of an irrigated farm in the Punata area
Image:PunataReserv.JPG|Fig. P2. The irrigation projects in Punata with a complex system of reservoirs, irrigation zones, and water user organizations (''Comité's'')
Image:PunataRegion.JPG|Fig. P3. Sketch of the irrigation zones with sources of surface water and location of deep tube-wells
Image:PunataTransmis.JPG|Fig. P4. The permeability and transmissivity of the aquifer diminishes towards the end of the alluvial fan
</gallery>

==See also==
* [[Atuq Wachana (Arce-Punata)|Atuq Wachana]]
* [[K'illi K'illi]]
* [[Wila Jaqhi (Punata)|Wila Jaqhi]]

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== External links ==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090303084157/http://www.aguabolivia.org/situacionaguaX/Riego/mapas/cbba/punata.htm Map of Punata Province]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20070825045345/http://www.ine.gov.bo/pdf/boletin/np_2005_75.pdf www.ine.gov.bo]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090119105638/http://cdteca.enlared.org.bo/IndiceDesarrollo/idh.htm ''Informe sobre Desarollo Humano'', ''Consultas'', Cochabamba]

{{Cochabamba Department}}
{{Authority control}}
{{coord|17|35|S|66|15|W|type:adm2nd_region:BO|display=title}}

[[Category:Provinces of Cochabamba Department]]

Latest revision as of 19:41, 11 September 2024

Punata Province
Province
Location of the Punata Province within Bolivia
Location of the Punata Province within Bolivia
Provinces of the Cochabamba Department
Provinces of the Cochabamba Department
Coordinates: 17°35′0″S 66°15′0″W / 17.58333°S 66.25000°W / -17.58333; -66.25000
Country Bolivia
DepartmentCochabamba
CapitalPunata
Area
 • Total
330 sq mi (850 km2)
Elevation
9,020 ft (2,750 m)
Population
 (2024 census)[1]
 • Total
61,382
 • Density190/sq mi (72/km2)
Time zoneUTC-4 (BOT)

Punata is a province almost in the middle of the Cochabamba Department, Bolivia, located about 45 km south of the city of Cochabamba. Its capital is Punata. The province is limited to the north by the Chapare Province, to the north-east by the Tiraque Province, to the east by the Arani Province, to the south-east by the Mizque Province, to the south by the Esteban Arze Province and to the west by the Germán Jordán Province.

Its archaeological and historical sites are the main interest for foreign tourists.

Subdivision

[edit]
Political map of Punata Province

Punata Province is divided into five municipalities which are partly further subdivided into cantons.

Section Municipality Seat
1st Punata Municipality Punata
2nd Villa Rivero Municipality or Muela Municipality Villa Rivero
3rd San Benito Municipality
or Villa José Quintín Mendoza Municipality
San Benito
4th Tacachi Municipality Tacachi
5th Cuchumuela Municipality
or Villa Gualberto Villarroel Municipality
Cuchumuela

The people

[edit]

The people are predominantly indigenous citizens of Quechuan descent. By 2001 census was counted 47735 inhabitants and it rose to 54409 inhabitants by the 2012 census. The economic center is the city of Punata with 28707 inhabitants.

Ethnic group Punata Municipality (%) Villa Rivero Municipality (%) San Benito Municipality (%) Tacachi Municipality (%) Cuchumuela Municipality (%)
Quechua 76.2 93.8 87.1 92.9 94.3
Aymara 0.8 0.1 0.6 0.1 0.4
Guaraní, Chiquitos, Moxos 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.2
Not indigenous 22.7 6.0 12.1 7.0 4.9
Other indigenous groups 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.2

Ref: obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo

Languages

[edit]

The languages spoken in the Punata Province are mainly Quechua and Spanish. The following table shows the number of those belonging to the recognized group of speakers.[2]

Language Punata Municipality Villa Rivero Municipality San Benito Municipality Tacachi Municipality Cuchumuela Municipality
Quechua 21,255 5,387 10,529 953 1,767
Aymara 256 16 94 4 3
Guaraní 25 4 9 1 1
Another native 22 7 6 0 1
Spanish 20,797 3,394 9,650 674 851
Foreign 148 14 48 3 1
Only native 4,232 2,201 2,450 350 968
Native and Spanish 17,096 3,194 8,105 603 801
Only Spanish 3,703 200 1,545 71 50

Irrigation of the alluvial fan of Punata

[edit]
The large alluvial fan of Punata, near Cochabamba, Bolivia. The watershed is located in the Andes mountain range.

Reference: The Punata-Tiraque irrigation project near Cochabamba, Bolivia[3]

The alluvial fan of Punata in the Valle Alto is fed by The Rio Paracaya river with a high average discharge. Consequently, the fan is fairly flat.

The region of Punata, at the upper end of the Valle Alto, at about 2800 m altitude, has a summer rainfall of 400 to 450 mm starting in the second half of November end ending in March. Maize is here the most important food crop, followed by potatoes. Alfalfa is the dominant fodder crop, followed by maize straw. (Fig. P1). These crops could, of old, only be planted successfully because of the existence of additional water resources like runoff, floods, river base-flow and groundwater. In the winter months, crop growth is restricted due to the occurrence of night frosts, especially in June and July, and absence of rains.

The total rural population in Punata is estimated at 25 000. There are about 4000 families of which an estimated 3680 are farmer families. The farms are small. The average size is 1.3 ha of which 1 ha is cropped. The modal size of farm is smaller, about 0.7 ha.

The rainfall distribution in Punata is characterized by a wet season from December to March, a dry season from May to October, and transition months in April and November. The average yearly total is 428 mm (1966 to 1983, San Benito). The rainfall with a probability of exceedance of 75% (R75) on a year basis is 360 mm. Rainfall is not reliable: in the period from 1966 to 1983, the yearly total varied between 246 mm (1982/83) to 591 mm (1968/69).

The river floods during the rainy summer period can be used for irrigation by anyone who wants to. When the river flow recedes, the stream can only be used for rotational irrigation by those who are entitled to take part in it (this is locally called the mita system). By the month of May the river base-flow becomes strongly reduced, and a drought period sets in, lasting into November.

Irrigation is considered desirable to start the cropping season in August/September, so that an early harvest can be obtained. The early harvest has a high market value and reduces peak labor requirements. Further, the irrigation reduces the risk of crop failure and it permits diversification of agricultural produce. Nevertheless, there are some farming communities that have refrained in the past from the extra effort to obtain additional irrigation water and who seemed to be content with purely rain-fed cropping.

At a modest scale, irrigation from deep-wells is also practiced.

In order to satisfy the needs of the majority of the farmers who strongly wish to have additional irrigation water, the irrigation project Punata-Tiraque began to be developed from 1970 onwards. The project entailed the construction of a complicated system of dams and reservoirs up in the Andean mountains (Fig. P2).

The gross area of the Punata projects is estimated at 4600 ha, 90% of which can be used for agriculture or animal husbandry. About 1150 ha of this presently receive irrigation water, either surface water derived from the Laguna Robada or Lluska Kocha dam, or water pumped from the 16 deep wells in the project area (estimated at 350 ha). In addition there are a few hundred hectares that receive occasional water from mita irrigation (wild flooding).

The traditional irrigation method is based on handling large irrigation flows (golpes) per farm at large intervals. The intake structures in the Pucara Mayu river, at the place where it enters the alluvial fan of Punata, would alternately pass water from each of the reservoir systems (Laguna Robada and Lluska Kocha / Muyu Loma) and the natural mita water. The new system has been designed for smaller flows with shorter rotation intervals, but it works continuously for the whole area, so that there is no need anymore to separate the various sources of water. It covers a much larger area than the traditional system and it incorporates the associations of the mita systems (which may have partly the same members), the associations of tube-well systems (which may also have partly the same members) as well as the persons who had no previous water rights.

Hence, the new irrigation system makes it necessary to replace the traditional water rights by a totally new set of rights (and duties). In addition, the farmers will have to get used to new water distribution methods and new field irrigation techniques. Because the new irrigation zones do not correspond to the boundaries of the existing, scattered, Comité’s de Riego (Fig. P3), not only the water management but also the organizational structure will have to be adjusted to the new situation.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Bolivia: Administrative divisions". City Population. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
  2. ^ obd.descentralizacion.gov.bo Archived 2009-02-18 at the Wayback Machine (Spanish)
  3. ^ R.J. Sevenhuijsen, R.J. Oosterbaan and K. Zijderveld, 1988. The Punata-Tiraque irrigation project near Cochabamba, Bolivia. International Institute for Land Reclamation and Improvement (ILRI), Wageningen, The Netherlands. Public Domain. On line: [1]
[edit]

17°35′S 66°15′W / 17.583°S 66.250°W / -17.583; -66.250