Abstract:
This study was carried out with the aim of assessing the effects of land use/
land cover change on the hydrology of River Mara. The study incorporated
remote sensing and GIS tools and hydrologic models to prepare and analyze
the data. The Mara River basin is a trans-boundary basin between Kenya and
Tanzania. The basin is 13,835 km2 and strands from the Mau forest in Kenva
to Musoma in Tanzania. The basin receives bimodal rainfall with the mean
values varying from 1400 mmlyr on the highlands to 600 mmlyr on the
lowlands. The mean temperature is 25°C.
Land cover change was analyzed from dry season LandSat MSS, TM and
ETM images of 1973, 1986 and 2000 respectively. Digital image analysis
showed that between 1973 and 2000, forests and shrubland have reduced by
32% and 34% respectively. Grassland, savannah and water bodies have also
reduced by 45%, 26%, and 47% respectively. However agricultural land, tea
and open forests, and wetlands all increased by over 100%.
The USGS Geo-SFM was evaluated as a streamflow generating tool for the
Mara River basin. Calibration and validation were done with streamflow data
from Nyang' ores, Amala and Mara mines gauging stations along the Mara
River. The model was calibrated from 1983 to 1988 and validated from 1989
to 1991. After calibration the model was found to predict high streamflow
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quite accurately but underestimated the low flows. The coefficient of
determination (R2) during validation varied between 0.69 and 0.87.
The calibrated USGS Geo SFM model was then used to investigate the effects
of the derived land cover to the river flow. The hydrological response of 1973
and 2000 land cover classifications showed that over the 28 years, flow peaks
have on average increased by 6% and occur 4 days earlier. The 2000 land
cover dataset was more sensitive to rainfall runoff relationships and produced
runoff even after small rainfalls which otherwise did not produce runoff when
the 1973 land cover data set was used. In addition, the hydrograph generated
with the 2000 land cover dataset was shifted to the left, the rise to peak was
faster, peaks were higher and the recession phase was faster compared to the
hydro graph generated with the 1973 land cover dataset.
Six land cover change scenanos describing different but plausible
development pathways for the headwater forests in the basin were developed
for the year 2025. The scenarios developed were business as usual scenario
where forests were decreasing at 1.2%, forest conservation which had forests
expanding at 5% and forest degradation scenario where forests were
decreasing at 5%. The extreme of these scenarios; completely agricultural
land, completely forested land and completely bare land were also analyzed.
Comparing forest conservation and completely forested scenarios to the base
scenario (current situation), stream flow peaks reduced by 8.7% and 17.1%
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whereas mean flow reduced by 2.5% and 3.1 % respectively. On the other
extreme completely bare and completely agricultural scenarios increased flow
peaks by 47% and 38.4% and mean streamflow rate by 3.3% and 1.7%
respectively.
The results of this study serve to equip decision makers, government
organization, non government organizations and the community with
information to initiate resource preservation in Mara River basin. The issues
highlighted in this study can help come up with sound integrated water and
natural resources management plans for the basin.