Abstract:
Land use and climate are two important factors influencing hydrological conditions. Land
use change can result in change of flood frequency, severity, base flow, and annual mean
discharge, while climate variability can change the flow routing time, peak flows and
volume. The main objective of this study was to assess the mechanisms associated with
physical and dynamical processes influencing the hydrology of the Upper Awash
River basin, especially under a changing land cover and climate. Specifically the study
tried to quantify the past changes in land use and future climate change and their
implication to catchment hydrology. The past changes in land use were determined by
classifying the Landsat images of the years 1972, 1985, 1995, and 2005. Bias corrected
CORDEX RCM data was used to analyze future climate conditions. Power
transformation and linear regression techniques were used to correct the biases of
precipitation and temperature respectively. The Soil and Water Assessment Tool
(SWAT) model was used to investigate the impact of land cover and climate change on
stream flow. The model was calibrated and validated using historical flow data. Land
cover change analysis has shown an increase in urban land use and cultivation by 82.6%
and 16% respectively and decrement in the other land uses like forest, grassland, water
body, wetland, and shrub land by 1.7%, 313%, 11%, 91.31%, and 360% respectively.
The climate scenario has indicated that the rain fall will increase by 15.8% and 26.7% for
the wet months in the short (2011-2040) and long (2071-2100) time horizon scenario
respectively; But it will decrease by 5.07% during the medium time horizon scenario
(2041-2071). The average maximum annual temperature will increase for all the short,
medium and long time horizon scenarios. The SWAT model was calibrated using flow
data from 1987 to 1999 and validated from 2000 to 2009. The R
2
and Nash‐Sutcliffe
Efficiency (NSE) values for the watershed were 0.82 and 0.83 for calibration, and 0.74
and 0.7 for validation, respectively. Simulation of catchment response for land cover
dynamics has indicated a 3.5%, 5%, and 9.6 % increase in the mean wet monthly flow for
1985, 1995, and 2005 land covers respectively; but a decrease in the dry average
monthly flow by 5.2%, 8.4% and 4.5% for land cover of 1985, 1995 and 2005 land
covers respectively. Simulation of SWAT model for the future climate scenarios has shown that the average
annual runoff will increase by 9.2% and 10.6% for the short (2011-2041) and long (2071-
20100) time horizon scenarios. Finally, the study also recommends different adaptation
and mitigation strategies should be developed to deal with the consequences of these
environmental changes.