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Recent land cover and use changes in Miombo woodlands of eastern Tanzania

TLDR
In this paper, preliminary results from a study conducted with the aim of contributing to the understanding of dynamics of land cover and use changes in miombo woodlands of eastern Tanzania were discussed.
Abstract
Forest and wood land ecosystems in Tanzania occupy more than 45% of the land area, more than two thirds of which made up of the Miombo woodland. The main form of land use in the Miombo region has long been shifting and small-scale sedentary cultivation. The lack of infrastructure and prevalence of deadly diseases such as malaria and trypanosiomiasis have long limited extensive clearance for cultivation, livestock farming and settlements. However, due to positives changes in the socio-economical, political and technological setup in miombo region, the types and intensity of land use are now changing. This paper discusses preliminary results from a study conducted with the aim of contributing to the understanding of dynamics of land cover and use changes in miombo woodlands of eastern Tanzania. The study area comprises four villages around the “Kitulangalo Forest Reserve”, 140 km west of Dar es Salaam on either side of the Morogoro-Dar es Salaam highway. Landsat MSS satellite images of July 1975, Landsat TM satellite images of July 2000 were used to assess land cover changes between 1975 and 2000. Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA), questionnaire survey and checklists for key informants were the major methods used for collecting socio-economic data. The land cover/use class of woodland with scattered cultivation has recorded the highest percentage of change between July 1975 and July 2000. While all other classes have registered positive changes, only the closed woodland class has had negative change meaning that this class has been decreasing in favour of other land cover/use classes. Recent land cover and use changes are drastic in the study area. These changes have been triggered largely by varied factors including mainly increased population density and subsequent economic activities. Economic activities including charcoal business, shifting cultivation, opening up of improved highway and pastoralism in the study area have greatly contributed to deforestation and woodland degradation. In light of these findings, there is need for: (1) Adequate land use planning and survey of village lands so as to avoid exacerbation of land use conflict and environmental degradation in the study area. (2) Agrarian reforms to eliminate open access regimes to natural resources. (3) Enforcement of fiscal policies related to the extraction of natural resource products such as timber and charcoal so as to reduce pressure on woodlands. Keywords: land use – cover change – Kitulangalo – miombo woodlands

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Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying Land Use/Cover Dynamics in the Koga Catchment, Ethiopia, from Multi-Scale Data, and Implications for Environmental Change

TL;DR: Analysis of more than 50 years of land cover and land use changes in the 260 km 2 Koga catchment in North Western Ethiopia revealed that woody vegetation decreased from 5,576 ha to 3,012 ha from the 1950s to 2010, but there is an increasing trend since then.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing landscapes of value: Capitalist investment for the acquisition of marginal or unused land. The case of Tanzania

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the terms marginal and unused land serve as a manipulative terminology for the benefit of attempts to commercially valorize and commodify African landscapes, from biofuel to large-scale food production and tourism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Revising the potential of large-scale Jatropha oil production in Tanzania: An economic land evaluation assessment

TL;DR: In this paper, the preconditions that would make large-scale oil production from the feedstock Jatropha curcas viable were analyzed by employing an economic land evaluation approach; first, they estimate the physical land suitability and the necessary inputs to reach certain amounts of yields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal wood harvest in miombo woodland considering REDD + payments — A case study at Kitulangalo Forest Reserve, Tanzania

TL;DR: In this article, a non-linear programming model was used to determine economically optimal harvest of miombo woodlands for charcoal production, with and without payment for reduced emissions from forest degradation under the assumption that the woodland was not reserved for environmental protection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monetary incentives to avoid deforestation under the Reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD)+ climate change mitigation scheme in Tanzania

TL;DR: Avoiding deforestation of the montane forest would be feasible under the REDD+ scheme, however, implementation of the policy in villages around the miombo area would require very high compensation levels.
References
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The Vegetation of Africa

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TL;DR: In this article, the author's introduction to remote sensing provides coverage of the subject irrespective of disciplines of study or the academic department in which remote sensing is taught, but equal emphasis is placed on non-photographic sensing systems and the analysis of data from these systems using digital image processing procedures.
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The miombo in transition: Woodlands and welfare in Africa

TL;DR: The Miombo in Transition is a resource for researchers, with over 250 pages reviewing and synthesising over 400 studies as mentioned in this paper, which is used to identify key issues for research and facilitate formulation of new management strategies, policies and institutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of the dynamic ecology of zambian vegetation

R. M. Lawton
- 01 Mar 1978 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that there is a dynamic relation between the three vegetation types, with a trend in the absence of fire from chipya via miombo to mateshi; and that, specifically, certain chipya species form patches of low canopy which provide a suitable habitat for the establishment of a number of Uapaca spp.
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