Land cover and land use analysis in coastal Bangladesh

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Abstract

Land cover and land use (LCLU) analysis is a central determinant of the current and future relationship between people and local ecosystem services. It provides the spatial basis for the integrated analysis of the study area. Historical change (1989–2010) is identified using classification techniques based on available satellite imagery supported by other data. Nine categories of LULC are identified; water, Bagda (brackish shrimp farming), Galda (freshwater prawn farming), agriculture (non-waterlogged), agriculture (waterlogged), wetlands and mudflats, mangrove, rural settlements and major urban areas. The analysis shows an increase in aquaculture (mainly replacing rice fields), with agriculture becoming more intermixed with settlements. Future LULC scenarios are determined based on stakeholder narratives.

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Mukhopadhyay, A., Hornby, D. D., Hutton, C. W., Lázár, A. N., Amoako Johnson, F., & Ghosh, T. (2018). Land cover and land use analysis in coastal Bangladesh. In Ecosystem Services for Well-Being in Deltas: Integrated Assessment for Policy Analysis (pp. 367–381). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71093-8_20

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