Hydrological impacts of urbanization of two catchments in Harare, Zimbabwe
Date
2014Author
Gumindoga, Webster
Rientjes, Tom
Shekede, Munyaradzi Davis
Rwasoka, Donald Tendayi
Nhapi, Innocent
Haile, Alemseged Tamiru
Type
ArticleMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract: By increased rural-urban migration in many African countries, the assessment of
changes in catchment hydrologic responses due to urbanization is critical for water resource
planning and management. This paper assesses hydrological impacts of urbanization on two
medium-sized Zimbabwean catchments (Mukuvisi and Marimba) for which changes in land
cover by urbanization were determined through Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) images for
the years 1986, 1994 and 2008. Impact assessments were done through hydrological
modeling by a topographically driven rainfall-runoff model (TOPMODEL). A satellite
remote sensing based ASTER 30 metre Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was used to compute
the Topographic Index distribution, which is a key input to the model. Results of land cover classification indicated that urban areas increased by more than 600 % in the Mukuvisi
catchment and by more than 200 % in the Marimba catchment between 1986 and 2008.
Woodlands decreased by more than 40% with a greater decrease in Marimba than Mukuvisi
catchment. Simulations using TOPMODEL in Marimba and Mukuvisi catchments indicated
streamflow increases of 84.8 % and 73.6 %, respectively, from 1980 to 2010. These increases
coincided with decreases in woodlands and increases in urban areas for the same period. The
use of satellite remote sensing data to observe urbanization trends in semi-arid catchments
and to represent catchment land surface characteristics proved to be effective for
rainfall-runoff modeling. Findings of this study are of relevance for many African cities,
which are experiencing rapid urbanization but often lack planning and design.
Additional Citation Information
Gumindoga, W., Rientjes, T., Shekede, M. D., Rwasoka, D. T., Nhapi, I. & Haile, A. T. (2014). Hydrological impacts of urbanization of two catchments in Harare, Zimbabwe. Remote Sensing, 6, 12544-12574. doi:10.3390/rs61212544Publisher
MDPI