Abstract

It is well-established that changes in land cover and land use (LCLU) are relevant to current local and global changes that are directly linked with food security, human health, urbanization, biodiversity, trans-border migration, environmental refuges, water and soil quality, runoff and sedimentation rates, and other processes. This paper examines LCLU change processes within the Cointzio watershed (Central Mexico). The analysis covers a 28-year time period from 1975 to 2003. LCLU changes were deduced from multi-temporal remote sensing analyses (1975, 1986, 1996, 2000 and 2003). Nearly all of the LCLU changes experienced in the Cointzio watershed occurred during the 1986-1996 period. Half of the 665 km² of the watershed have changed during this period, in what corresponds to a ten-fold increase in the rate of change as compared to the 1975-1986 and 1996-2003 periods. These massive changes are probably related to the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) of 1986, which limited the transit of undocumented Mexican workers to the United States of America. The methodology applied in this research constitutes a low-cost alternative for evaluating the impact of LCLU change in watersheds. The magnitude of land use change differed during the periods of analyses in the watershed, functional zones and geoforms. The methodological approach applied in this analysis integrates standard procedures to evaluate land cover and land use change in watersheds. Due to the practical value of the results, the data and information generated during the analysis have been made available to local authorities.

Highlights

  • Land cover (LC) and land use (LU) are key elements in describing the terrestrial environment in relation to nature and human activity

  • Land cover and land use changes at watershed level The spatial distribution of land cover land use analyzed in this study is depicted in

  • Quantitative information of processes of land cover and land use (LCLU) change presented is based on the interaction of remote sensing, geographic information system (GIS) and geomorphologic knowledge

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Summary

Introduction

Land cover (LC) and land use (LU) are key elements in describing the terrestrial environment in relation to nature and human activity. LU refers to the type of human activities that produce goods and services for societies and that occur on the Earth’s surface. Studies of LCLU have historically been separated; LC was traditionally of interest to the natural sciences and described the physical status of land, such as, for example, the quantity and quality of vegetation or water that covered the surface of the land (Meyer and Turner II, 1994). Social scientists and management planners have mostly studied LU, describing the influence of humans on the environment. It is estimated that between 30 and 50% of the Earth’s surface has been transformed or degraded by human activity (Vitousek et al, 1997)

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