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The State of Land Use in Northern Nigeria: A Landsat-Based Mapping Framework

Fernando Sedano, Vasco Molini () and M Abul Kalam Azad

No 9335, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank

Abstract: This study developed a land cover and land use mapping framework specifically designed for agricultural systems in the Sudan-Sahel region. The mapping approach extracts information from inter- and intra-annual vegetation dynamics from dense stacks of Landsat 8 images. The framework was applied to create a 30-meter spatial resolution land use map focusing on the 2015 agricultural landscapes in northern Nigeria. The map provides up-to-date information with a high level of spatial and thematic detail, resulting in a more precise characterization of agriculture in the region. The map reveals that agriculture is the main land use in the region. Arable land represents on average 52.5 percent of the area, which is higher than the reported national average for Nigeria (38.4 percent). Irrigated agriculture covers nearly 2.2 percent of the total area, reaching nearly 20 percent of the cultivated land when traditional floodplain agriculture systems are included, which is above the reported national average (0.63 percent). There is significant variability in land use in the region. This study demonstrates the feasibility of multitemporal medium-resolution remote sensing data to provide detailed, up-to-date information on agricultural systems in the arid and sub-arid landscapes of the Sahel region.

Keywords: Food Security; Inequality; Hydrology; Climate Change and Agriculture; Water and Food Supply; Irrigation and Drainage; Agricultural Irrigation and Drainage (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020-07-27
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr and nep-env
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