Journal of the Indian Society of Remote Sensing | 2019

Integration of Remote Sensing, GIS and MCDM for Land Capability Classification in Andit Tid Watershed, Ethiopia

 
 

Abstract


AbstractLand evaluation is the core component of land-use planning process, particularly where resource is limited and degraded, like Ethiopian Highland. Thus, evaluation of land in terms of its capability is important. The aim of land capability is to identify the physical inherent capacity of the land for different uses to avoid further degradation. Relevant data such as soil depth, soil texture, soil drainage, erosion hazard, altitude, slope and slope direction have been utilized for land capability evaluation in Andit Tid watershed. The integration of remote sensed data, geographical information system and multicriteria evaluation approach was used to obtain spatial information of land capability. The result revealed that the largest part of the watershed was occupied by class III 122.44\xa0ha (25.87%) and the smallest part occupied by class VIII 3.6\xa0ha (0.76%), characterized by very steep slope and rocky and used only as natural reserves. Class I, which claimed only few limiting factors, occupied only 7.65\xa0ha (1.62%). The first four classes (I–IV), which have a capability for agricultural purpose, occupied 63%, class V and class VI occupied 119.2\xa0ha (25.19%), capable for grazing, and class VII holds 51.63\xa0ha (10.91%), capable for forestry. The main limiting factors for land capability classification were soil texture, soil depth, soil drainage and slope. As compared to the current land use, with the current land use, most of the lands are used against the capability classification of the land.\n

Volume 47
Pages 763-775
DOI 10.1007/s12524-019-00949-z
Language English
Journal Journal of the Indian Society of Remote Sensing

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