Abstract

In the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, agriculture represents the most important economic sector, and land control can be considered a perpetual source of conflict. Knowledge of the existing production system distribution is fundamental for both informing national land tenure reforms and guiding more effective agricultural development interventions. The present paper focuses on existing agricultural production systems in Katoyi collectivity, Masisi territory, where returning Internally and Externally Displaced People are resettling. We aim to define a repeatable methodology for building evidence-based and updated knowledge concerning the spatial distribution of the two existing production systems: subsistence-oriented agriculture (SOA) and business-oriented agriculture (BOA). To this aim, we used a supervised object-based classification approach on remotely sensed Sentinel-2 imagery to classify land cover. To classify production systems further within the “agriculture” and “pasture” land use classes, binary classification based on an entropy value threshold was performed. An iterative approach was adopted to define the final HNDVI threshold that minimised commission and omission errors and maximised overall accuracy and class separability. The methodology achieved acceptable observed accuracy (OA equal to 80–90% respectively for agricultural and pasture areas) in the assessment. SOA and BOA respectively covered 24.4 and 75.6% of the collectivity area (34,606 ha). The results conclude that land use and entropy analysis can draw an updated picture of existing land distribution among different production systems, supporting better-adapted intervention strategies in development cooperation and pro-poor agrarian land tenure reforms in conflict-ridden landscapes.

Highlights

  • The control of land has always been at the core of profound disputes in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) [1,2,3]

  • Roads and water bodies were obtained from OSM data and overlapped on the land use/land cover (LULC) map, since they were not relevant for the work focused on vegetation-related classes

  • It is possible to note that the areas containing forests were mainly located in the central-western part of the Goma Diocese (GD), while agricultural and pasture land were more represented in the central-eastern zone

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Summary

Introduction

The control of land has always been at the core of profound disputes in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) [1,2,3]. The first is the type of agricultural activity defined as family farming by the FAO [11] It is usually implemented on small plots of land, with access to very local markets. The rural complex is a distinctive agricultural land cover mosaic surrounding the network of inhabited areas found along rivers and roads in DRC. It contains paths, grassy and bare communal areas, settlements and various land uses, primarily those associated with traditional smallholder livelihood shifting cultivation: cleared land, active fields, fallow fields, secondary forest and a permeable interface area with primary forest [12]

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