Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa

Impact assessments of actual and potential land use (LU) changes on hydrology are vital in land use planning, which is a prerequisite for effective water resources management. In this study, impacts of actual, as well as potential, LU changes on the hydrology of the Bonsa catchment (1482 km2), Ghana...

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Main Authors: Michael S. Aduah, Graham P. W. Jewitt, Michele L. W. Toucher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-12-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/1/9
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spelling doaj-ca8f9ae2884a4177a6f30199a59a17a92020-11-24T22:25:16ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412017-12-01101910.3390/w10010009w10010009Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West AfricaMichael S. Aduah0Graham P. W. Jewitt1Michele L. W. Toucher2Department of Geomatics Engineering, University of Mines and Technology, P.O. Box 237, Tarkwa, GhanaCentre for Water Resources Research, University of KwaZulu-Natal, PBAG x01, Scottsville 3209, Pietermaritzburg, South AfricaCentre for Water Resources Research, University of KwaZulu-Natal, PBAG x01, Scottsville 3209, Pietermaritzburg, South AfricaImpact assessments of actual and potential land use (LU) changes on hydrology are vital in land use planning, which is a prerequisite for effective water resources management. In this study, impacts of actual, as well as potential, LU changes on the hydrology of the Bonsa catchment (1482 km2), Ghana, West Africa, were assessed using the Agricultural Catchments Research Unit (ACRU) hydrological model. Baseline, current and potential future LU maps for three scenarios, namely, business-as-usual (BAU), economic growth (EG) and economic growth and reforestation (EGR), driven by observed climate between 1990 and 2009, were used for the study. The results indicate that peak and dry season streamflows between 1991 and 2011 have increased by 21% and 37%, respectively, under the current land use in comparison to the baseline due to a decrease in evergreen and secondary forests by 18% and 39%, respectively, and an increase in settlements, mining areas and shrubs/farms by 81%, 310% and 343%, respectively. The potential future LU scenarios suggest that there may be further increases in streamflows, but the historical land use changes between 1991 and 2011 were so substantial that they will continue to impact streamflow changes in any of the future land use scenarios. The study also showed that variability of streamflow changes at the catchment scale was lower than at the subcatchment scale. For the scenarios of potential future LU changes, the BAU shows the highest increases in streamflows, while the EGR shows the least. Policy interventions for effective management of the catchment are recommended.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/1/9Bonsa catchmentGhanahydrologyland use scenarios
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael S. Aduah
Graham P. W. Jewitt
Michele L. W. Toucher
spellingShingle Michael S. Aduah
Graham P. W. Jewitt
Michele L. W. Toucher
Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
Water
Bonsa catchment
Ghana
hydrology
land use scenarios
author_facet Michael S. Aduah
Graham P. W. Jewitt
Michele L. W. Toucher
author_sort Michael S. Aduah
title Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
title_short Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
title_full Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
title_fullStr Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Impacts of Land Use Changes on the Hydrology of a Lowland Rainforest Catchment in Ghana, West Africa
title_sort assessing impacts of land use changes on the hydrology of a lowland rainforest catchment in ghana, west africa
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Impact assessments of actual and potential land use (LU) changes on hydrology are vital in land use planning, which is a prerequisite for effective water resources management. In this study, impacts of actual, as well as potential, LU changes on the hydrology of the Bonsa catchment (1482 km2), Ghana, West Africa, were assessed using the Agricultural Catchments Research Unit (ACRU) hydrological model. Baseline, current and potential future LU maps for three scenarios, namely, business-as-usual (BAU), economic growth (EG) and economic growth and reforestation (EGR), driven by observed climate between 1990 and 2009, were used for the study. The results indicate that peak and dry season streamflows between 1991 and 2011 have increased by 21% and 37%, respectively, under the current land use in comparison to the baseline due to a decrease in evergreen and secondary forests by 18% and 39%, respectively, and an increase in settlements, mining areas and shrubs/farms by 81%, 310% and 343%, respectively. The potential future LU scenarios suggest that there may be further increases in streamflows, but the historical land use changes between 1991 and 2011 were so substantial that they will continue to impact streamflow changes in any of the future land use scenarios. The study also showed that variability of streamflow changes at the catchment scale was lower than at the subcatchment scale. For the scenarios of potential future LU changes, the BAU shows the highest increases in streamflows, while the EGR shows the least. Policy interventions for effective management of the catchment are recommended.
topic Bonsa catchment
Ghana
hydrology
land use scenarios
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/1/9
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