Abstract

Land use change, especially that due to farmland abandonment in the mountains of Nepal, is being seen as a major factor contributing to increasing eco-environmental risk, undesirable changes in the socio-cultural landscape, biodiversity loss, and reduced capacity of the ecosystem to provide key services. This study aims to: i) evaluate eco-environmental risk for one of the high mountain river basins, the Dordi river basin in Nepal, that has a growing potential of farmland abandonment; and ii) develop a risk-based land use planning framework for mitigating the impact of risk and for enhancing sustainable management practices in mountain regions. We employed a multi-criteria analytic hierarchy process (AHP) to assign risk weightage to geophysical and socio-demographic factors, and performed spatial superposition analysis in the model builder of a geographic information system (GIS) to produce an eco-environmental risk map, which was subjected to a reliability check against existing eco-environmental conditions by ground truthing and using statistical models. The result shows that 22.36% of the basin area has a high level of risk. The very high, extreme high, moderate, and low zones accounted 17.38%, 7.93%, 28.49%, and 23.81%, respectively. A high level of eco-environmental risk occurs mostly in the north and northwest, but appears in patches in the south as well, whereas the level of moderate risk is concentrated in the southern parts of the river basin. All the land use types, notably, forest, grassland, shrub land, and cultivated farmland, are currently under stress, which generally increases with elevation towards the north but is also concentrated along the road network and river buffer zones where human interference with nature is the maximum. The risk map and the framework are expected to provide information and a scientific evidence-base for formulating and reasonable development strategies and guidelines for consensus-based utilization and protection of eco-environmental resources in the river basin. As an awareness raising tool, it also can activate social processes enabling communities to design for and mitigate the consequences of hazardous events. Moreover, this risk assessment allows an important link in understanding regional eco-environmental risk situation, land use, natural resources, and environmental management.

Highlights

  • The Nepal mountains are characterized by a richly diverse ecological and socio-cultural landscape, and have been shaped by traditional land use activities [1,2,3]

  • The risk map enables communities to design for and mitigate the consequences of hazardous events. This risk assessment allows an important link in understanding regional eco-environmental risk situation, making land use, natural resources, and environmental management

  • This study evaluates eco-environmental risk conditions for the Dordi river basin located in the high mountains of the Nepalese Himalayas, produces a risk map, and develops a land planning framework

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Summary

Introduction

The Nepal mountains are characterized by a richly diverse ecological and socio-cultural landscape, and have been shaped by traditional land use activities [1,2,3]. The land management systems in practice have developed over the years in accordance with the prevailing environmental factors, including topography, climate, relief, soil, and proximity to roads and settlements [4]. A balance between people, settlement, farmland, forest, and grassland was achieved in the traditional land use practice. This practice contributed to the ecological and environmental diversity in the mountains and to the socio-cultural values of the landscape. In order to manage the ever-increasing risk and to promote sustainable mountain development and eco-environmental protection, proper eco-environmental risk-based land use planning is essential [11]

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