Abstract

Soil erosion is a serious threat in Ethiopian highlands. Continuous land degradation resulted in loss of fertile top soil leading to low agricultural productivity. In addition, excessive soil erosion from Koga Watershed in upper catchment to an artificial reservoir (Koga Dam reservoir) is substantially reducing its service life. Community participatory based effective watershed management strategies may have tremendous potential to reduce soil erosion. However, it is not practical to implement management interventions in the entire basin. This study aims to identify and map erosion hotspot areas in Koga Watershed to assist local government decision towards implementing watershed management strategies. Multi Criteria Evaluation (MCE) technique was integrated with Geographic Information System (GIS). For these analysis four major factors: Topography, soil, land use and potential location of gullies were considered. Each of these was processed and analyzed for its potential contribution to erosion on a pixel by pixel basis. The factors were weighted using pair-wise comparison matrix and weights were combined using Weighted Overlay Tool of ArcGIS Spatial Analyst Toolbox to obtain the final erosion hotspot map. The results found that 2% (440 ha) to be highly sensitive, 43% (9,460 ha) to be moderately sensitive, 16% (3,520 ha) to be marginally sensitive and 32% (7,040 ha) currently not sensitive. The remaining 7% of the watershed area (22,000 ha) was constraint to erosion. The lowland area near the dam was found to be found most sensitive for erosion and sedimentation.

Highlights

  • Excessive soil erosion in the highlands of Ethiopia brought reduced agricultural productivity

  • Koga River is a tributary to Gilgel Abay River which drains to Lake Tana in the Upper Blue Nile Basin

  • The elevation of Koga watershed varies from 2,005 to 3,147 meter above sea level within the watershed based on Digital Elevation Model (DEM)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Excessive soil erosion in the highlands of Ethiopia brought reduced agricultural productivity. Natural and artificial reservoirs are suffering from sedimentation and constructed dams are ceased functioning before their service life. Rate of soil erosion is increasing alarmingly necessitating design of proper watershed management strategies. Constructed Koga dam reservoir is one of the affected reservoirs in the basin. The siltation rate is high (100200 Mt/ha/yr.) and 50% is supplied from agricultural lands in the form of sheet and rill erosion (Reynolds, 2012).

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call