Detecting wetland encroachment and urban agriculture land classification in Uganda using hyper-temporal remote sensing.

Q2 Multidisciplinary AAS Open Research Pub Date : 2022-02-16 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.12688/aasopenres.13040.2
Stella Kabiri, Molly Allen, Juduth Toma Okuonzia, Beatrice Akello, Rebecca Ssabaganzi, Drake Mubiru
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Abstract

Background: Urbanization is an important indicator of economic growth and social change but is associated with environmental degradation, which threatens the sustainable growth of African cities. One of the most vulnerable ecosystems in urban areas are wetlands. In Uganda, wetlands cover an area of 11% of the country's land area. Half of the wetland areas in Ugandan cities have been converted to industrial and residential areas, and urban agriculture. There is limited information on the extent of wetland conversion or utilization for urban agriculture. The objective of this study was to investigate the extent of wetlands lost in two Ugandan cities, Wakiso and Kampala, in the last 30 years. Secondly, we extracted crop agriculture in the wetlands of Kampala and Wakiso from hyper-temporal satellite image analysis in an attempt to produce a spatial detail of wetland encroachment maps of urban agriculture using a reproducible mapmaking method. Methods: Using a field survey and free remote sensing data from Landsat TM 1986 and Landsat ETM 2016 we classified the rate of wetland loss and encroachment between the years 1986 and 2016. We used MODIS NDVI 16-day composites at a 500-meter spatial resolution to broaden the analysis to distinguish distinctive crops and crop mixtures in the encroached wetlands for urban agriculture using the ISODATA clustering algorithm. Results: Over 30 years, 72,828 ha (73%) of the Wakiso-Kampala wetlands have been lost meanwhile agriculture areas have doubled. Of this 16,488 ha (23%) were converted from wetlands. All cultivated agriculture in Kampala was in the wetlands while in Wakiso, 73% of crop agriculture was in the wetlands. The major crops grown in these urban wetlands were banana (20%), sugarcane (22%), maize (17%), Eucalyptus trees (12%), sweet potatoes (10%), while ornamental nurseries, pine trees, vegetables, and passion fruits were each at 5%.

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乌干达湿地入侵与城市农业用地分类的超时相遥感研究
背景:城市化是经济增长和社会变革的重要指标,但与环境退化有关,威胁到非洲城市的可持续增长。湿地是城市地区最脆弱的生态系统之一。在乌干达,湿地占该国陆地面积的11%。乌干达城市中一半的湿地已被改造成工业区、住宅区和都市农业。关于湿地转化或城市农业利用程度的信息有限。这项研究的目的是调查乌干达两个城市瓦基索和坎帕拉在过去30年里湿地的损失程度。其次,从超时相卫星图像分析中提取坎帕拉和瓦基索湿地的作物农业,试图利用可复制的制图方法生成城市农业湿地侵占图的空间细节。方法:利用野外调查和Landsat TM 1986和Landsat ETM 2016免费遥感资料,对1986 - 2016年湿地流失和侵蚀率进行分类。为了扩大分析范围,采用ISODATA聚类算法,在500米空间分辨率下使用MODIS NDVI 16天复合材料来区分城市农业侵蚀湿地中的不同作物和作物混合。结果:30多年来,瓦基索-坎帕拉湿地损失了72,828公顷(73%),而农业面积翻了一番。其中16488公顷(23%)由湿地转化而来。坎帕拉所有的耕地农业都在湿地,而瓦基索73%的农作物农业都在湿地。这些城市湿地种植的主要作物是香蕉(20%)、甘蔗(22%)、玉米(17%)、桉树(12%)、红薯(10%),而观赏苗木、松树、蔬菜和百香果各占5%。
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来源期刊
AAS Open Research
AAS Open Research Multidisciplinary-Multidisciplinary
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
6 weeks
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