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Library Linking long-term gully and river channel dynamics to environmental change using repeat photography (Northern Ethiopia)

Linking long-term gully and river channel dynamics to environmental change using repeat photography (Northern Ethiopia)

Linking long-term gully and river channel dynamics to environmental change using repeat photography (Northern Ethiopia)

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2011
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201500208906
Pages
238-251

In the Highlands of Northern Ethiopia gully occurrence is linked to poverty-driven unsustainable use of the land in a vulnerable semi-arid and mountainous environment, where intensive rainfall challenges the physical integrity of the landscape. Trends in gully and river channel erosion, and their relation to triggering environmental changes can proffer valuable insights into sustainable development in Northern Ethiopia. In order to assess the region-wide change in gully and river channel morphology over 140years, a set of 57 historical photographs taken in Tigray, and, clearly displaying gully cross-sections, were precisely repeated from 2006 till 2009. Ninety-two percent of the gully and river sections (n=38) increased in cross-sectional area during the studied period, especially after 1975. Two repeatedly photographed catchments of Lake Ashenge and Atsela allowed a detailed study of gully development from 1936 until 2009. A conceptual hydrogeomorphic model was devised for these catchments and validated for the Northern Ethiopian Highlands. Three major phases can be distinguished in the hydrological regime of the catchments. In the first phase, between 1868 (or earlier) and ca. 1965, the relatively stable channels showed an oversized morphology inherited from a previous period when external forcing in environmental conditions had caused the channels to shape. In the second phase (ca. 1965 – ca. 2000), increased aridity and continued vegetation clearance accelerated the channel dynamics of the gully and river system. The third phase (ca. 2000 – present) started after the large-scale implementation of soil and water conservation measures. In 2009, 23% of the gully and river sections were stabilizing. This paper validates previous research indicating severe land degradation in the second half of the 20th century. Additionally, it demonstrates that the recent erosive cycle started around 1965 and, that at the present time, improved land management stabilizes headwater streams.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Frankl, Amaury
Nyssen, Jan
De Dapper, Morgan
Haile, Mitiku
Billi, Paolo
Munro, R. Neil
Deckers, Jozef
Poesen, Jean

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