Abstract

Increasing land use pressure is a primary force for degradation of agricultural areas. The drivers for these pressures are initiated by a series of interconnected processes. This study presents a novel methodology to analyze drivers of changing land use pressure and the effects on society and landscape. The focus was on characterizing these drivers and relate them to land use statistics obtained from geospatial data from the important semiarid Merguellil Wadi between 1976 and 2016. Cause-and-effect relationships between different drivers of land use change were analyzed using the DPSIR approach. Results show that during the 40-year period cultivated land increased and wetland areas decreased substantially. Drivers for change were pressure from economic development, cultivation practices, and hydro-agricultural techniques. This leads to stress on water and soil resulting in soil erosion, poverty increase, and rural exodus. We show that hydro-agricultural techniques adapted to the semiarid climate, allocation of land property rights, resource allocation, and improved marketing of agricultural products can help rural residents to diversify their economy, and thus better preserve the fragile semiarid landscape. Results of this study can be used to ensure sustainable management of water and soil resources in areas with similar climate and socio-economic conditions.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralLand use has significant environmental and socio-economic impacts

  • The Merguellil Wadi Basin is located in central Tunisia

  • The DPSIR model provided qualitative means regarding the land use changes and included an explanatory platform to understand the complexity of these changes

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralLand use has significant environmental and socio-economic impacts. The dynamics of land use are to a great extent influenced by human and natural processes, and results from complex interactions between social, economic, and biophysical developments [2,3]. These processes operate at various temporal and spatial scales and are significantly affected by agricultural development, technological advances, and population pressure [1,4,5]. Human-induced land use changes reflect various policies of land use development and management. These changes may be economically beneficial for humans, the stability of the natural environment may be jeopardized (e.g., [7])

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