Influence of Land Use Land Cover Change on Groundwater Recharge in the Continental Terminal Area of Abidjan, Ivory Coast
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Abstract
The process by which rainfall reaches the aquifer in a sedimentary area is infiltration.
This process could be affected quantitatively or qualitatively by the
changes in the land use land cover (LULC) as a result of anthropogenic activities
which could affect groundwater reserves. This study focuses on the influence
of LULC change on groundwater recharge in the context of urbanization
and population growth. Four weather stations data and satellite image
data were used in order to evaluate water infiltration which is the amount of
water that reaches the piezometric surface from 1990 to 2016. The spatial-
temporal LULC change in relation to urbanization sprawl was assessed
based on a series of Landsat images for 1990, 2000 and 2016. The maximum
likelihood pixel-based on classification method was used to analyze the spatial-
temporal LULC dynamics. The Thiessen polygon method was used for
the mean area precipitation computation. The recharge was determined using
water balance method after determining the runoff based on the Soil Conservation
Service curve number method. The results show an increase in
built-up and agricultural land, while the forest and shrub areas declined with
water body remaining unchanged over the period 1990-2016. The decline in
forest could be imputed to the demographic and socio-economic growth as
expressed by the expansion of agriculture and urbanization. Groundwater
recharge and runoff results are respectively 34%, 20% in 1999; 21%, 46% in 2000 and 26%, 14% in 2016 of rainfall and show their strong dependence on
precipitation and LULC change.
