Impacts on the Urban Environment: Land Cover Change Trajectories and Landscape Fragmentation in Post-War Western Area, Sierra Leone

被引:56
作者
Gbanie, Solomon Peter [1 ,2 ]
Griffin, Amy L. [1 ,3 ]
Thornton, Alec [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ New South Wales Canberra, Sch Phys Environm & Math Sci, POB 7916, Campbell, ACT 2612, Australia
[2] Univ Sierra Leone, Fourah Bay Coll, Fac Pure & Appl Sci, Dept Geog, Freetown 00232, Sierra Leone
[3] RMIT Univ, Sch Sci, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia
关键词
urban agriculture; land cover change trajectory; landscape fragmentation; landscape metrics; Sierra Leone; Western Area; Landsat; ARMED CONFLICT; CIVIL CONFLICT; FOOD SECURITY; FOREST; WAR; CONSERVATION; AGRICULTURE; FREETOWN; PATTERNS; WILDLIFE;
D O I
10.3390/rs10010129
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
An influential underlying driver of human-induced landscape change is civil war and other forms of conflict that cause human displacement. Internally displaced persons (IDPs) increase environmental pressures at their destination locations while reducing them at their origins. This increased pressure presents an environment for increased land cover change (LCC) rates and landscape fragmentation. To test whether this hypothesis is correct, this research sought to understand LCC dynamics in the Western Area of Sierra Leone from 1976 to 2011, a period including pre-conflict, conflict, and post-conflict eras, using Landsat and SPOT satellite imagery. A trajectory analysis of classified images compared LCC trajectories before and during the war (1976-2000) with after the war (2003-2011). Over the 35-year period, the built-up land class rapidly increased, in parallel with an increase in urban and peri-urban agriculture. During the war, urban and peri-urban agriculture became a major livelihood activity for displaced rural residents to make the region food self-sufficient, especially when the war destabilised food production activities. The reluctance of IDPs to return to their rural homes after the war caused an increased demand for land driven by housing needs. Meanwhile, protected forest and other forest declined. A significant finding to emerge from this research is that landscape fragmentation increased in conjunction with declining forest cover while built-up areas aggregated. This has important implications for the region's flora, fauna, and human populations given that other research has shown that landscape fragmentation affects the landscape's ability to provide important ecosystem services.
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页数:25
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