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Chain-Spectrum Analysis of Land Use/Cover Change Based on Vector Tracing Method in Northern Oman

Siyu Zhou and Caihong Ma ()
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Siyu Zhou: School of Geography and Planning, Ningxia University, Yinchuan 750021, China
Caihong Ma: School of Geography and Planning, Ningxia University, Yinchuan 750021, China

Land, 2025, vol. 14, issue 9, 1-15

Abstract: Land use/cover (LUCC) change in arid oasis–desert ecotones has significant implications for spatial governance in ecologically fragile regions. To better capture the temporal and spatial complexity of land transitions, this study developed a vector tracing method by integrating time-series remote sensing data with vector-based transfer pathways. Analysis of northern Oman from 1995 to 2020 revealed the following: (1) Arable land and impervious surfaces expanded from 0.51% to 1.09% and from 0.31% to 0.98%, respectively, while sand declined from 99.03% to 97.01%. Spatially, arable land was concentrated in piedmont irrigation zones, impervious surfaces near coastal cities, and shrubland and grassland along the Al-Hajar Mountains, forming a complementary land use mosaic. (2) Human activities were the dominant driver, with typical one-way chains accounting for 69.76% of total change. Sand was mainly transformed into arable land (7 C 1, 7 D 1, 7 E 1; where the first part denotes the original type, the letter denotes the year of change, and the last digit denotes the new type), impervious surfaces (7 C 6, 7 D 6, 7 E 6), and shrubland (7 E 4). (3) Water scarcity and an arid climate remained primary constraints, manifested in typical reciprocating chains in the oasis–desert interface (7 D 1 E 7, 7 A 1 B 7, 7 C 1 D 7) and in the arid vegetation zone along the Al-Hajar Mountain foothills (7 D 3 E 7, 7 C 3 D 7), together accounting for 24.50% of total change. (4) The region exhibited coordinated transitions among oasis, urban, and ecological land, avoiding the common conflict of cropland loss to urbanization. During the study period, transitions among arable land, impervious surfaces, forest, shrubland, and wetland were rare (Type 16: 3.31%, Type 82: 2.89%, Type 12: 0.04%, Type 18: 0.01%). The case of northern Oman provides a valuable reference for collaborative spatial governance in ecologically fragile arid zones. Future research should integrate socio-economic drivers, climate change projections, and higher-temporal-resolution data to enhance the applicability of the chain-spectrum method in other arid regions.

Keywords: land use/cover change; chain-spectrum features; vector tracing method; northern Oman (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: Q15 Q2 Q24 Q28 Q5 R14 R52 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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