Abstract

Understanding humanity’s relationship with nature is crucial for the well-being and sustainable development of mankind in the face of global environmental change. Communities depend on landscapes for survival and landscapes determine if sustainable development is to be achieved. The links between landscapes, ecosystem services, livelihoods, and climate change are often complex, misunderstood, and barely studied in rural areas of Africa, where communities live side-by-side with conservation areas. Our study surveyed the perception of the nexus of landscape change, climate change, ecosystem services, and livelihoods in Gonarezhou, a national park in southeastern Zimbabwe. We also used Landsat satellite imagery to map the landscape change over 20 years to validate and to correlate with the survey data. The survey results indicated that people relied on rainfed agriculture as a means of livelihood, but droughts as a result of climate change force communities to engage in other means of livelihoods such as small-scale poaching of small game such as impala and harvesting of natural resources such as edible shrubs. Crops and livestock as provisional ecosystem services have been negatively affected by climate change and landscape change. Landsat data confirmed that there was a negative transformation of the landscape as a result of agriculture, growth in settlements, and large herbivores. However, there was also a positive landscape transformation resulting from the conservation efforts by the Gonarezhou Conservation Trust (GCT). Cultural services about education and awareness of the environment and provisional services such as wild fruits are booming. Challenges such as soil erosion, human–wildlife conflict, and minimal community benefits from conservation efforts hindered sustainable development in the study area. While changes in landscape, climate, livelihoods, and ecosystem services happened at a local scale, the underlying drivers such as politics and the economy were also identified as drivers of landscape change.

Highlights

  • Landscape management is crucial for sustainable livelihood and resource use [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The sample of 56 was appropriate because the respondents contained richly textured information pertaining to our objective of gleaning material on livelihoods, landscape change, ecosystem services, and climate change in and around Gonarezhou National Park [55]

  • The statistical analysis focused on time series analysis, thematic analysis, and descriptive statistics for the variables pertaining to landscape change, climate change, ecosystem services, and livelihoods

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Summary

Introduction

Landscape management is crucial for sustainable livelihood and resource use [1,2,3,4,5]. With competing needs for ecosystem services between conservation and ecotourism, livelihoods and commercial farming, amongst others, in the drylands of Africa [21,22,23,24], it is crucial to comprehend how landscapes change by combining earth observation and social science methods in rural communities. We selected Gonarezhou National Park, Zimbabwe as a study site to assess community perception on landscape and climate change, ecosystem services, and livelihoods. (2) assess landscape change, its impacts and drivers; (3) glean the perceptions on ecosystem services; Sustainability 2020, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW and (4) identify the impact the climate change and variability in Gonarezhou. The sample of 56 was appropriate because the respondents contained richly textured information pertaining to our objective of gleaning material on livelihoods, landscape change, ecosystem services, and climate change in and around Gonarezhou National Park [55]. They were obtained from Buffalo Range weather station, located 54 km from Gonarezhou Park

Data Analysis
Landscape Change Mapping and Analysis
Livelihoods
Perception of Ecosystem Services
Cultural Services
Climate Change and Variability
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