Litcius/Paper detail

Responses of water balance component to land use/land cover and climate change using geospatial and hydrologic modeling in the Gidabo watershed, Ethiopia

Henok Mekonnen Aragaw, Surendra Kumar Mishra, Manmohan Kumar Goel

2022Geocarto International13 citationsDOI

Abstract

The impact of climate change (CC) and land-use/land-cover (LULC) change on water resources poses a major threat globally. This study investigates the separate and combined responses of CC and LULC change on water balance in Gidabo watershed, Ethiopia, using Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), Cellular Automata-Markov Chain, and regional climate models. CC projection under RCP 4.5 and hydrological modeling show a significant decline in mean annual surface runoff (Q), baseflow (BF), water yield (WY), percolation (PC), and evapotranspiration (ET) during mid-century (2027–2056) as well as late-century (2061–2090) compared to the baseline period (1988–2018) data, largely due to decline in rainfall. Likewise, under RCP 8.5 scenario, the modeling results show a decrease in Q, BF, WY, PC, and ET during these periods. The LULC change (often associated with an expansion in cultivated and urban areas and a reduction in evergreen forest and grassland) alone leads to a positive synergy with an increase in mean annual Q and WY and a negative synergy with a decrease in BF, PC and ET during the period 2018 to 2075. The combined effects of climate and LULC changes have also shown a decline in Q, BF, WY, PC and ET. Overall, the climate change impacts significantly the future Q and WY. However, the combined effect of climate and LULC changes on BF, PC, and ET is more prominent than their separate impacts and it underlines the significance of this study.

Topics & Concepts

BaseflowEnvironmental scienceClimate changeEvapotranspirationLand coverWater balanceLand use, land-use change and forestrySoil and Water Assessment ToolHydrology (agriculture)Land useWatershedDeforestation (computer science)Surface runoffGeographyStreamflowDrainage basinEcologyMachine learningGeotechnical engineeringEngineeringBiologyProgramming languageComputer scienceCartographyHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrological Forecasting Using AI