Land-use and Land-cover Change Issues Related to Dams Stephanie Bohlman and Michael W. Binford Department of Geography University of Florida Image source:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Mekong River - survival for millions Lake Tonle Sap Mekong Delta Mekong Delta Wetland.
Advertisements

Section 3: Stream Deposition
Dams. Enhanced economic prosperity Public health Agriculture Altered natural environments Reduced streamflows Water quality degradation Fish and wildlife.
Water Pollution. Watershed A watershed is an area of land from which all the water drains to the same location, such as a stream, pond, lake, river, wetland.
Humans Impacts on Land Objective 2.07
From last lesson…. Name 2+ countries/areas of the world with: Little or no water scarcity Physical water scarcity Approaching physical water scarcity Economic.
LT: I can explain positive and negative impacts of building a dam.
Hydroelectric Power
Overview of Watershed Systems
Water Issues In the Mekong River Basin Karlyn Eckman Water in the World Seminar October
Three Gorges Project: A Project of the Century By: Xinyu Huang.
HUMAN IMPACT ON LAND BY: MR. MERINGOLO. WHY IS LAND SO IMPORTANT? SUPPLIES A SOLID SURFACE FOR BUILDINGS AND ROADS THE SOIL IN LAND PROVIDES NUTRIENTS.
End of Basin issues in Mekong Basin
Sustainable Development and Environmental Awareness 1 PROCESSES AND PROBLEMS IN THE WORLD OF NATURE.
Dams Helpful or Hurtful?. What do you already know?  Brainstorm with your partners what you know about dams.  Be ready to report out!
BELL WORK Pg. 224 Q.# 5. Human Impact on Land Lesson 2.
Using the DSF to assess scenarios Some things it will do for you - and some things it won’t.
Sediment Issues within Transboundary Basins Presented by Paul Bireta and Fernando Salas April 12, 2012.
11.2 Water Use and Management Pg 296 – 303 “We all live downstream”
Srinakarin Dam ครูจันทนา คำอนุกูล. The Srinakarin Dam is one of the important dams in Kanchanaburi, which is situated in Srisawat District. The atmosphere.
Chapter 33 Dam Construction. Objectives After reading the chapter and reviewing the materials presented the students will be able to: Give reasons why.
Unit 9 Lesson 2 Human Impact on Land Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Prof. R. Shanthini Jan 26, Hydroelectric - Hydroelectric - Solar - Wind - Geothermal - Marine (Wave and Tidal) - Biofuels (Biomass, Bioethanol and.
Unit 6: Land & Water Use Review. Give an example of the Tragedy of the Commons that involves livestock.
Chapter 21 Water Supply, Use and Management. Water is Unique High heat capacity (climate) Universal solvent (dissolves compounds) High surface tension.
WaterSection 2 Water Use and Management A shortage of clean, fresh water is one of the world’s most pressing environmental problems. According to the World.
DISTURBANCES TO ECOLOGICAL RESOURCES IN THE MEKONG RIVER BASIN.
Sustainable Water Use & Global Water Resources Ch. 13.
Chapter 18. The Nile Problem Where Solution Other details 4 positives Clean water Irrigation Transport Tourism Electric power Fishing 4 negatives.
Watersheds Human activities and structures, as depicted
Sustainable Development and Environmental Awareness1.
Environmental Management Module V
EXPERIENCES OF THE MEKONG RIVER COMMISSION IN FLOOD MANAGEMENT AND MITIGATION IN THE LOWER MEKONG BASIN Petrina Rowcroft Development Economist Basin Development.
Chapter 9 Water Resources. Usable Water is Rare “Water, water everywhere nor any drop to drink…” ~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1798.
ESTUARIES Where a freshwater stream meets the sea & the water level changes with the tides Also includes where a river or stream meets a large body of.
Chapter 13 Water: A Limited Resource. Importance of Water  Cooking & washing  Agriculture  Manufacturing  Mining  Energy production  Waste disposal.
Lesson 1 Identifying Environmental and Economic Impacts from Soil Erosion.
Describe the features and characteristics of the Three Gorges Dam.
Section 1: How We Use Land
Section 3: Stream Deposition
The Mekong River Commission: Challenges, Mission, and Strategies.
Surface Water Ecosystems
Journal #5 What is a flood? Why are floods harmful? What can humans do to prevent floods?
WATER USE & DISTRIBUTION Chapter 11 Environmental Science.
Human-Environmental Interaction. Adaptation What does it mean to “adapt” to something? Humans must adapt to the climate, landforms, vegetation, and natural.
Dams Helpful or Hurtful?.
1 PP 2.3 Development Potentials of LMB Water Resources PP 2.3 Development Potentials of LMB Water Resources.
The Mekong River Commission: Challenges, Mission, and Strategies.
Going With The Flow… Or Not. One Dam’s March For Freedom.
The Regional Land Degradation Assessment in Drylands (LADA) Workshop for Southeast Asia Bangkok, Thailand 27 – 30 April 2009.
Objectives..describe and explain hard and soft flood prevention strategies Page GCSE Geography AQA A.
Human Impacts Part 2- Watersheds. What’s a Watershed? An area of land that drains into a common body of water.
People  science  environment  partners Economic, Social and Ecological Issues in the Lower Mekong Basin Countries Mahfuzuddin Ahmed WorldFish Center,
Hard v Soft Engineering You decide???. Hard v Soft Building a structure (often concrete and steel) to control the river. Essentially, dealing with the.
“THERE IS NOT ENOUGH WATER IN THE SYSTEM TO DO EVERYTHING WE WANT” CONFLICTS.
Human-Environmental Interaction
Hydrosphere Notes Part 9-Land Use.
Water Resources.
What are the solutions for the water crisis?
GANDHINAGAR INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
What runs but never walks, Has a mouth but never talks, Has a bed but never sleeps, Has a head but never weeps?
4.10 Why do we drain wetlands?
DO NOW Pick up notes and Review #31 Turn in Review #30.
Water Resources Q: What water can we use?
Dams Helpful or Hurtful?.
Human-Environmental Interaction
Underground Reservoir An underground reservoir near Annis Hill.
Learning Unit 8: Big dams
River Systems Chapter 15.
Surface Water Streams, rivers, ponds, lakes and wetlands.
Presentation transcript:

Land-use and Land-cover Change Issues Related to Dams Stephanie Bohlman and Michael W. Binford Department of Geography University of Florida Image source: Tucurui

Land-use/Land-cover Change

Land Cover Definition (Bio)physical description of the earth's surface. For example: vegetation (trees, bushes, fields, lawns), bare soil, hard surfaces (rocks, buildings) and wet areas and bodies of water (watercourses, wetlands). Directly observable

Land Use Definition The socio-economic description (functional dimension) of areas: areas used for residential, industrial or commercial purposes, for farming or forestry, for recreational or conservation purposes, etc. Not directly observable, but can sometimes be inferred from land cover.

One More Issue of Terminology Dam: the structure across a river that retains water. Reservoir: artificial lake created by a dam. ws.it/news- en/Chinese-dams- on-the- Brahmaputra- threaten-lives-of- Indians-and- Bangladeshis html

“Large ” Dam Definition Large dams have embankment height of more than 15 meters or storage volume exceeding 3 million m 3. A mean depth of 10 m in the reservoir suggests minimum surface area of 300,000 m 2 covered by water, or less than 1 km 2. » ICOLD definition

Global Database of Dams

Purposes of Dams 48% are for irrigation 17% for hydropower, mostly hydroelectric 13% for water supply 10% for flood control 5% for recreation <1% for navigation and fish farming. – ICOLD ALL OF WHICH HAVE LU/LC IMPLICATIONS!

What Happens to Land when a Dam Is Built? People who live in area that will be covered by the reservoir must move - resettlement. – Owners in good land-tenure countries are compensated and move elsewhere, usually to nearby cities. – Inhabitants in rural areas or informal settlements in most countries are either evicted or resettled. Resettlement programs have been conducted for decades, some successfully Future dams will probably spur more rural-urban migration, already underway for several generations Land cover in reservoir area cleared (seldom) Construction sites and housing built for workers and support populations When reservoir is filled, people are attracted to water – Transportation – Agriculture – irrigation, access to markets (large corporations)] – Subsistence – Haiti – upstream settlement -> deforestation -> reservoir sedimentation – Recreation – infrastructure and access Full reservoir inundates former floodplains and riparian areas – Inundates fertile bottomland soils – Removes riparian corridor for organism movement, sediment/biogeochemical function – Formerly terrestrial land is inundated, either permanently or intermittently Afforestation – some nations have programs in upstream parts of the basin to reduce erosion Downstream: – flow moderated, people plant or build in previous floodplains Fertile soils in former floodplain Subject to catastrophic flooding – dam failure happens! – Flow moderated, earlier livelihood methods based on flooding can be lost (Egypt, Cambodia) – Drought mitigation (Egypt, Thailand) – Flood mitigation (Vietnam Mekong Delta) MORE

Resettlement

New land allocated to resettlement – Rural inhabitants to other agricultural lands? China Three Gorges – 42.7% rural of 1.3 million (6 million?) displaced Deforestation upstream cause of increased flooding, so agricultural resettlement could not be upstream (Tan and Yao 2006) but must be distant. Informal resettlement Migration to urban areas

Downstream Flow moderated, people plant or build in previous floodplains – Fertile soils in former floodplain Tuttle Creek Reservoir, near Manhattan, KS

Downstream Flow moderated, people plant or build in previous floodplains – Subject to catastrophic flooding

Downstream Flow moderated, earlier livelihood methods based on flooding can be lost (Egypt, Cambodia) Tonle Sap Lake and Mekong

Downstream Amazon: Flooded Forest?

Rivers, Dams, and Land Use: Still Stuck on Basic Research Questions How does the creation of big dams and reservoirs affect change in LULC? – Direct – Indirect – In and near reservoir – Far from reservoir How does LULC affect reservoirs? – More well-studied

On To Stephanie