A Review on Land Use and Land Cover Change in Ethiopian Basins
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Date
2021-06-01Author
Regasa, Motuma Shiferaw
Nones, Michael
Adeba, Dereje
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Show full item recordAbstract
Land Use Land Cover (LULC) changes analysis is one of the most useful methodologies
to understand how the land was used in the past years, what types of detections are to be expected
in the future, as well as the driving forces and processes behind these changes. In Ethiopia, Africa,
the rapid variations of LULC observed in the last decades are mainly due to population pressure,
resettlement programs, climate change, and other human- and nature-induced driving forces.
Anthropogenic activities are the most significant factors adversely changing the natural status of
the landscape and resources, which exerts unfavourable and adverse impacts on the environment
and livelihood. The main goal of the present work is to review previous studies, discussing the
spatiotemporal LULC changes in Ethiopian basins, to find out common points and gaps that exist
in the current literature, to be eventually addressed in the future. A total of 25 articles, published
from 2011 to 2020, were selected and reviewed, focusing on LULC classification using ArcGIS and
ERDAS imagine software by unsupervised and maximum likelihood supervised classification
methods. Key informant interview, focal group discussions, and collection of ground truth
information using ground positioning systems for data validation were the major approaches
applied in most of the studies. All the analysed research showed that, during the last decades, Ethiopian lands changed from natural to agricultural land use, waterbody, commercial farmland, and built-up/settlement.
Some parts of forest land, grazing land, swamp/wetland, shrubland, rangeland, and bare/ rock out
cropland cover class changed to other LULC class types, mainly as a consequence of the increasing
anthropogenic pressure. In summary, these articles confirmed that LULC changes are a direct result
of both natural and human influences, with anthropogenic pressure due to globalisation as the main
driver. However, most of the studies provided details of LULC for the past decades within a specific
spatial location, while they did not address the challenge of forecasting future LULC changes at the
watershed scale, therefore reducing the opportunity to develop adequate basin-wide management
strategies for the next years.