Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya

Kenya's catchments has both natural and disturbed environments. Within these environments, there has been interaction between hydrological, physical and ecological characteristics. Therefore, impacts of Land Use Land Cover (LULC) change on surface and sub – surface hydrology needs to be well un...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lilian A. Juma, Nsalambi V. Nkongolo, James M. Raude, Caroline Kiai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-07-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844022010878
_version_ 1811222249819078656
author Lilian A. Juma
Nsalambi V. Nkongolo
James M. Raude
Caroline Kiai
author_facet Lilian A. Juma
Nsalambi V. Nkongolo
James M. Raude
Caroline Kiai
author_sort Lilian A. Juma
collection DOAJ
description Kenya's catchments has both natural and disturbed environments. Within these environments, there has been interaction between hydrological, physical and ecological characteristics. Therefore, impacts of Land Use Land Cover (LULC) change on surface and sub – surface hydrology needs to be well understood due to the increasing population competing for scarce natural resources such as water, trees and forest land. The water balance components' spatial and temporal dynamics in relationship to the LULC change between 2003 and 2018 in the Lower Nzoia Sub – Catchment (LNSC) in Kenya was therefore assessed. Landsat data with 30 m (m) spatial resolution was used in understanding LULC dynamics of the study area using Supervised Classification Approach (Interactive Classification Method) in ArcGIS 10.5. After landsat image classification, key water balance components including; surface runoff (SURFQ), lateral flow (LATQ), groundwater recharge (BASEQ), deep acquifer recharge (DEEPQ), evapotranspiration (ET) and groundwater revap (REVAP) for years 2003 and 2018 were estimated using SWAT model in ArcSWAT. The overall accuracies for 2003 and 2018 classified images were 75.9% and 98.9% respectively which are showing good values. The results of the study showed that agricultural land coverage reduced from 83.1% in 2003 to 78.6% in 2018. Rangeland on the hand increased from 6.3% to 9.8% while urban/built – up area increasing from 10.6% to 11.6%. The annual water balance components from the LULC distribution of the two time periods shows that ET reduced, SURFQ increased, BASEQ reduced, DEEPQ reduced, LATQ reduced and REVAP reduced. At catchment level, results show that 2018 had a higher water balance than 2003 which can partly be explained by land cover decrease. The relationship between rainfall distribution, Land Surface Temperature (LST) and LULC change were further compared. At the same time, the study found out that there is limited focus to date on rural communities climate adaptive capacity. Hence, water institutions in the sub – catchment such as Water Resources Authority (WRA) are yet to fully mainstream adaptive capacity into their organizational structure and policies.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T08:12:32Z
format Article
id doaj.art-89361370c56045e398aee8cd9579cc97
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2405-8440
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T08:12:32Z
publishDate 2022-07-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Heliyon
spelling doaj.art-89361370c56045e398aee8cd9579cc972022-12-22T03:40:56ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402022-07-0187e09799Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in KenyaLilian A. Juma0Nsalambi V. Nkongolo1James M. Raude2Caroline Kiai3Water Policy Master Graduate, Pan African University Institute of Water and Energy Sciences (including Climate Change). Tlemcen, Algeria; Corresponding author.School of Science, Navajo Technical University, Crownpoint, NM, USASoil, Water & Environmental Engineering Department, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture & Technology, Nairobi, KenyaSoil, Water & Environmental Engineering Department, Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture & Technology, Nairobi, KenyaKenya's catchments has both natural and disturbed environments. Within these environments, there has been interaction between hydrological, physical and ecological characteristics. Therefore, impacts of Land Use Land Cover (LULC) change on surface and sub – surface hydrology needs to be well understood due to the increasing population competing for scarce natural resources such as water, trees and forest land. The water balance components' spatial and temporal dynamics in relationship to the LULC change between 2003 and 2018 in the Lower Nzoia Sub – Catchment (LNSC) in Kenya was therefore assessed. Landsat data with 30 m (m) spatial resolution was used in understanding LULC dynamics of the study area using Supervised Classification Approach (Interactive Classification Method) in ArcGIS 10.5. After landsat image classification, key water balance components including; surface runoff (SURFQ), lateral flow (LATQ), groundwater recharge (BASEQ), deep acquifer recharge (DEEPQ), evapotranspiration (ET) and groundwater revap (REVAP) for years 2003 and 2018 were estimated using SWAT model in ArcSWAT. The overall accuracies for 2003 and 2018 classified images were 75.9% and 98.9% respectively which are showing good values. The results of the study showed that agricultural land coverage reduced from 83.1% in 2003 to 78.6% in 2018. Rangeland on the hand increased from 6.3% to 9.8% while urban/built – up area increasing from 10.6% to 11.6%. The annual water balance components from the LULC distribution of the two time periods shows that ET reduced, SURFQ increased, BASEQ reduced, DEEPQ reduced, LATQ reduced and REVAP reduced. At catchment level, results show that 2018 had a higher water balance than 2003 which can partly be explained by land cover decrease. The relationship between rainfall distribution, Land Surface Temperature (LST) and LULC change were further compared. At the same time, the study found out that there is limited focus to date on rural communities climate adaptive capacity. Hence, water institutions in the sub – catchment such as Water Resources Authority (WRA) are yet to fully mainstream adaptive capacity into their organizational structure and policies.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844022010878Accuracy assessmentWater balanceWater availabilityLand use/ land coverAdaptive capacityLower Nzoia sub- catchment
spellingShingle Lilian A. Juma
Nsalambi V. Nkongolo
James M. Raude
Caroline Kiai
Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
Heliyon
Accuracy assessment
Water balance
Water availability
Land use/ land cover
Adaptive capacity
Lower Nzoia sub- catchment
title Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
title_full Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
title_fullStr Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
title_short Assessment of hydrological water balance in Lower Nzoia Sub-catchment using SWAT-model: towards improved water governace in Kenya
title_sort assessment of hydrological water balance in lower nzoia sub catchment using swat model towards improved water governace in kenya
topic Accuracy assessment
Water balance
Water availability
Land use/ land cover
Adaptive capacity
Lower Nzoia sub- catchment
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844022010878
work_keys_str_mv AT lilianajuma assessmentofhydrologicalwaterbalanceinlowernzoiasubcatchmentusingswatmodeltowardsimprovedwatergovernaceinkenya
AT nsalambivnkongolo assessmentofhydrologicalwaterbalanceinlowernzoiasubcatchmentusingswatmodeltowardsimprovedwatergovernaceinkenya
AT jamesmraude assessmentofhydrologicalwaterbalanceinlowernzoiasubcatchmentusingswatmodeltowardsimprovedwatergovernaceinkenya
AT carolinekiai assessmentofhydrologicalwaterbalanceinlowernzoiasubcatchmentusingswatmodeltowardsimprovedwatergovernaceinkenya