Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016

Recent rapid urbanization in developing countries presents challenges for sustainable environmental planning and peri-urban cropland management. An improved understanding of the timing and pattern of urbanization is needed to determine how to better plan urbanization for the near future. Here, we de...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bhagawat Rimal, Lifu Zhang, Nigel Stork, Sean Sloan, Sushila Rijal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/5/1341
id doaj-07424a3f46374003aca0ccf0aecfdb37
record_format Article
spelling doaj-07424a3f46374003aca0ccf0aecfdb372020-11-24T23:45:15ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-04-01105134110.3390/su10051341su10051341Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016Bhagawat Rimal0Lifu Zhang1Nigel Stork2Sean Sloan3Sushila Rijal4The State Key Laboratory of Remote Sensing Science, Institute of Remote Sensing and Digital Earth, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), No. 20 Datun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, ChinaKey Laboratory of Oasis Eco-Agriculture, Xinjiang Production and Construction Group, Shihezi University, 221 N 4th Road, Shihezi City 832003, Xinjiang, ChinaEnvironmental Future Research Institute, School of Environment and Science, Nathan Campus, Nathan, Griffith University, 170, Kessels Road, Nathan, QLD 4111, AustraliaCollege of Science and Engineering, Center for Tropical Environmental and Sustainability Science, James Cook University, Cairns, QLD 4870, AustraliaFaculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Mahendra Ratna Multiple Campus, Ilam 57300, NepalRecent rapid urbanization in developing countries presents challenges for sustainable environmental planning and peri-urban cropland management. An improved understanding of the timing and pattern of urbanization is needed to determine how to better plan urbanization for the near future. Here, we describe the spatio-temporal patterns of urbanization and related land-use/land-cover (LULC) changes in the Tarai region of Nepal, as well as discuss the factors underlying its rapid urban expansion. Analyses are based on regional time-series Landsat 5, 7 and 8 image classifications for six years between 1989 and 2016, representing the first long-term observations of their kind for Nepal. During this 27-year period, gains in urban cover and losses of cultivated lands occurred widely. Urban cover occupied 221.1 km2 in 1989 and increased 320% by 2016 to a total 930.22 km2. Cultivated land was the primary source of new urban cover. Of the new urban cover added since 1989, 93% was formerly cultivated. Urban expansion occurred at moderately exponential rates over consecutive observation periods, with nearly half of all urban expansion occurring during 2006–2011 (305 km2). The annual rate of urban growth during 1989–1996 averaged 3.3% but reached as high as 8.09% and 12.61% during 1996–2001 and 2011–2016, respectively. At the district level, the rate of urban growth and, by extension, agricultural loss, were weakly related to total population growth. Variability in this relationship suggests that concerted urban-growth management may reduce losses of agricultural lands relative to historic trends despite further population growth and urbanization. Urbanization and LULC change in the Tarai region are attributable to significant inter-regional migration in a context of poor urban planning and lax policies controlling the conversion and fragmentation of peri-urban cultivated lands. Urban expansion and farmland loss are expected to continue in the future.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/5/1341Land-use/land coverurbanizationremote sensingTaraiNepal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bhagawat Rimal
Lifu Zhang
Nigel Stork
Sean Sloan
Sushila Rijal
spellingShingle Bhagawat Rimal
Lifu Zhang
Nigel Stork
Sean Sloan
Sushila Rijal
Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
Sustainability
Land-use/land cover
urbanization
remote sensing
Tarai
Nepal
author_facet Bhagawat Rimal
Lifu Zhang
Nigel Stork
Sean Sloan
Sushila Rijal
author_sort Bhagawat Rimal
title Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
title_short Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
title_full Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
title_fullStr Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
title_full_unstemmed Urban Expansion Occurred at the Expense of Agricultural Lands in the Tarai Region of Nepal from 1989 to 2016
title_sort urban expansion occurred at the expense of agricultural lands in the tarai region of nepal from 1989 to 2016
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Recent rapid urbanization in developing countries presents challenges for sustainable environmental planning and peri-urban cropland management. An improved understanding of the timing and pattern of urbanization is needed to determine how to better plan urbanization for the near future. Here, we describe the spatio-temporal patterns of urbanization and related land-use/land-cover (LULC) changes in the Tarai region of Nepal, as well as discuss the factors underlying its rapid urban expansion. Analyses are based on regional time-series Landsat 5, 7 and 8 image classifications for six years between 1989 and 2016, representing the first long-term observations of their kind for Nepal. During this 27-year period, gains in urban cover and losses of cultivated lands occurred widely. Urban cover occupied 221.1 km2 in 1989 and increased 320% by 2016 to a total 930.22 km2. Cultivated land was the primary source of new urban cover. Of the new urban cover added since 1989, 93% was formerly cultivated. Urban expansion occurred at moderately exponential rates over consecutive observation periods, with nearly half of all urban expansion occurring during 2006–2011 (305 km2). The annual rate of urban growth during 1989–1996 averaged 3.3% but reached as high as 8.09% and 12.61% during 1996–2001 and 2011–2016, respectively. At the district level, the rate of urban growth and, by extension, agricultural loss, were weakly related to total population growth. Variability in this relationship suggests that concerted urban-growth management may reduce losses of agricultural lands relative to historic trends despite further population growth and urbanization. Urbanization and LULC change in the Tarai region are attributable to significant inter-regional migration in a context of poor urban planning and lax policies controlling the conversion and fragmentation of peri-urban cultivated lands. Urban expansion and farmland loss are expected to continue in the future.
topic Land-use/land cover
urbanization
remote sensing
Tarai
Nepal
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/5/1341
work_keys_str_mv AT bhagawatrimal urbanexpansionoccurredattheexpenseofagriculturallandsinthetarairegionofnepalfrom1989to2016
AT lifuzhang urbanexpansionoccurredattheexpenseofagriculturallandsinthetarairegionofnepalfrom1989to2016
AT nigelstork urbanexpansionoccurredattheexpenseofagriculturallandsinthetarairegionofnepalfrom1989to2016
AT seansloan urbanexpansionoccurredattheexpenseofagriculturallandsinthetarairegionofnepalfrom1989to2016
AT sushilarijal urbanexpansionoccurredattheexpenseofagriculturallandsinthetarairegionofnepalfrom1989to2016
_version_ 1725496557855309824