Soil monitoring and land cover/land use assessment on the Blue Nile River Watershed, Blue Nile State – Sudan/ using remote sensing and other techniques

Authors

  • Abass Mohamed El-Hag Hamed
  • El-Mamoun Haroun Osman Ishag
  • Yousif Suleiman Abdalla Gumaa
  • Motasim Hyder Abdelwahab Wedatallah

Keywords:

Blue Nile River
Land use/ land cover change
Soil monitoring
remote sensing and LCCS

Abstract

The study was carried out along the course of the Blue Nile from the Ethiopian-Sudanese border in the south to the borders of the Blue Nile state with Sennar state in the north. The study area was determined by establishing a buffer around the course of the Blue Nile, with a width of 20 km (10 km at each side of the river), Blue Nile state. The study attempted to update some information in the study area regarding land use/ land cover, soil properties and contour map.
To facilitate forest inventory and field work. The study area was divided into equal area to four zones (A, B, C and D), 783 sites and soil sample samples were taken and classified using the land cover classification system (LCCS). The fieldwork and survey began with four practical groups, a group for each zone within the period 1 December 2015 to 5 March, 2016 in a total area of approximately 346483.42 ha.
Remote sensing and fieldwork data analysis showed that there are significant changes in land use/ land cover and soil properties are in the study area (1990 to 2015). Zones A and B (South of Rosieris Dam) are mainly composed of clay soil, while the soil of Zones C and D (North of Rosieris dam) is mainly loamy soil. the study indicate that 13%, 11%, 22% and 19% from zone A, B, C and D respectively lies within the slightly acidity (pH 5.5 to 6.5), while 87%, 87%, 78% and 81% of the same zone respectably was natural soil and 2% of zone B classified as Slightly alkaline soil (pH 8) and more than 50% of the total area classified as neutral to slightly acidity, which is suitable for most crops and natural vegetation covers.
SP% analysis showed that more than 80% of soils samples in the study area have SP% values greater than 40% which characterized combination of silt, loam and clay. The study indicate that the change in the patterns of land cover/ land use systems is found to be mainly due to civil war and economic crises with no clear signs of climatic change.

Author Biographies

Abass Mohamed El-Hag Hamed

College of Natural Resource and Environmental Studies | University of Bahri | Sudan

El-Mamoun Haroun Osman Ishag

College of Natural Resource and Environmental Studies | University of Bahri | Sudan

Yousif Suleiman Abdalla Gumaa

General Forestry Administration | Blue Nile State | Damazin | Sudan

Motasim Hyder Abdelwahab Wedatallah

Faculty of Agriculture | Omdurman Islamic University | Sudan

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Published

2023-03-29

How to Cite

1.
Soil monitoring and land cover/land use assessment on the Blue Nile River Watershed, Blue Nile State – Sudan/ using remote sensing and other techniques. JAEVS [Internet]. 2023 Mar. 29 [cited 2024 Dec. 11];7(1):51-65. Available from: https://journals.ajsrp.com/index.php/jaevs/article/view/6329

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Articles

How to Cite

1.
Soil monitoring and land cover/land use assessment on the Blue Nile River Watershed, Blue Nile State – Sudan/ using remote sensing and other techniques. JAEVS [Internet]. 2023 Mar. 29 [cited 2024 Dec. 11];7(1):51-65. Available from: https://journals.ajsrp.com/index.php/jaevs/article/view/6329