Effects of climate variability and/or land use dynamics on the hydrological balance of the Cavally river catchment at Toulepleu, West Africa

Author:

Yao Blé Anouma Fhorest1ORCID,Soro Gneneyougo Emile1ORCID,Larbi Isaac2ORCID,Limantol Andrew Manoba2,Goula Bi Tié Albert1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Geosciences and Environment Laboratory, Training and Research Unit in Environmental Science and Management, Nangui Abrogoua University, Abidjan, Côte D'ivoire

2. b Department of water resources and Aquaculture Management, University of Environment and Sustainable Development, Somanya, Ghana

Abstract

ABSTRACT The study focuses on assessing the individual and combined impacts of climate variability and land use change on hydrological responses. The results indicate that the basin, urban area, cropland, degraded forest, and open forest shows an increasing trend, while gallery forest shows a decreasing trend over the period 1992–2015. Climatic variability is marked by two climatic periods (a wet one from 1980 to 1996 and a dry one from 1997 to 2016) with a 35% decrease in rainfall. Regardless of the state of the landcover used, the simulated mean annual runoff decreases by 67.92% between the wet and dry climate periods. Changes in land use between 1992 and 2015 reduce mean annual runoff by 4.71%. Analysis of the joint effect of climatic and LU variation shows a 68.96% reduction in runoff. In this catchment. The joint impact has a clearly greater effect on runoff than the climatic impact, which is greater than that of human activities. There is a need for policymakers to prioritise sustainable land use practices and integrated water resource management strategies in the area to mitigate the combined effects of climate variability and anthropogenic activities, ensuring the long-term resilience of the ecosystem and water availability for local communities.

Funder

African-German Network of Excellence in Science

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Reference47 articles.

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