ASSESSING THE EFFECT OF LAND USE LAND COVER CHANGE ON STREAM FLOW AND SEDIMENT YIELD: THE CASE OF ROBIGUMERO WATERSHED, UPPER BLUE NILE BASIN, ETHIOPIA
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Date
2024-07-26
Authors
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Hawassa University
Abstract
Land use and land cover change significantly affected global water yield and sediment yield.
The population within the Robigumero watershed experiences periodic increases that are
attributable to changes in land use and land cover patterns occurring over both a spatial
and temporal scale. Therefore, this study mainly focused on assessing LULC change and
analyzing its impact on stream flow and sediment yield in the Robigumero watershed. For
this study, spatial and hydro-meteorological data were used as model input. ERDAS Image
2015 was used to assess land cover classification and accuracy. SWAT model was used to
simulate stream flow and sediment yield in monthly time steps. The model predicted stream
flow with R2
values of 0.89 and 0.77, NSE values of 0.87 and 0.76, and PBIAS values of -2.3
and -5.1 during calibration and validation periods, respectively. Similarly, the model
predicted sediment yield with R2
values of 0.80 and 0.75, NSE values of 0.80 and 0.74, and
PBIAS values of -7.1 and 0..9 during the calibration and validation periods, respectively.
During the study period from 1994 to 2021, the Robigumero watershed experienced
substantial LULC change, with agricultural land and built-up area increasing by 18.6% and
160.8%, respectively, while forest, grassland, and shrubland cover decreased by 12.7%,
10.4%, and 40%, respectively. The calibrated model predicted results showed that on the
watershed outlet point, mean annual stream flow increased by 4.64 m3
/s, and mean monthly
stream flow increased by 0.86 m3
/s during the wet season and decreased by 0.14 m3
/s during
the dry season from 1994 to 2021. Similarly, annual sediment yield increased by 5.5 t ha-
1
.yr-1
, with seasonal yields increasing by 4.84 t ha-1
.yr-1
during the wet season and 0.49 t ha-
1
.yr-1
during the dry season. Spatially, nine subbasins (43.3%) of the catchment revealed
sediment yield-critical areas; from these, 24.02 t ha-1
yr-1
of sediment was generated.
Implementing terracing, filter strips, and contouring in the critical subbasins demonstrated
sediment yield reductions of 71.1%, 46.3%, and 51.9%, respectively. The findings of this
study indicate that annual and wet season stream flow and sediment yield increased, while
dry season stream flow was reduced. The change in stream flow and sediment yield is a
direct result of the significant change in land use and land cover in the watershed. This
suggests soil and water resource development in the catchment needs urgent regulation by
the LULC and should be given priority to sediment reduction measures
Description
Keywords
SWAT Model, Sediment yield, Stream flow, Robigumero watershed, LULCC, ERDAS imagine, BM
