An examination of historical and future land use changes in Uganda using change detection methods and agent-based modelling
Authored by Jingjing Li, Tonny J Oyana, Paul I Mukwaya
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1080/19376812.2016.1189836
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Agent Analyst
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We analyse historical land use/land cover changes beginning from 1996 to
2013 and apply an agent-based model to simulate potential agricultural
land use change scenarios in Uganda. The model incorporates farmers'
decision-making processes into biophysical and socioeconomic factors and
uses these to analyse the effect of farmers' decisions on agricultural
land use changes. Geographic information system tools are employed to
build spatial relations between farmers and land cover systems.
Satellite images are used to represent the initial land cover conditions
and serve as observed land cover datasets to calibrate the simulated
results. Significant agricultural and grassland cover and urban land
uses are experienced in 72 and 36\% of the regions, respectively, while
wetland land uses increased significantly in 82\% of the regions. On the
other hand, 91\% of the regions experience reductions in forest cover
except for Teso region which reports gains of 62\% in forest cover.
Acholi is the only region (extreme outlier) that reports dramatic gains
in wetlands of over 880\%. The results of the simulation model are
promising, and the model was successful at representing historical and
future scenarios of agricultural land use patterns at a national level.
Tags
Climate
Dynamics
GIS
Decision-Making
Thailand