Environmental monitoring of land-use and land-cover changes in a Mediterranean Region of Turkey
Kilic, S. , Evrendilek, F., Berberoglu, S., Demirkesen, A.C. Environmental monitoring of land-use and land-cover changes in a Mediterranean Region of Turkey. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Volume 114, Issue 1-3, March 2006, Pages 157-168
Kilic, S. , Evrendilek, F., Berberoglu, S., Demirkesen, A.C.
Environmental monitoring of land-use and land-cover changes in a
Mediterranean Region of Turkey. Environmental Monitoring and
Assessment Volume 114, Issue 1-3, March 2006, Pages 157-168
Abstract - Unprecedented rates of human-induced changes in land use
and land cover (LULC) at local and regional scales lead to
alterations of global biogeochemical cycles. Driving forces behind
LULC changes mainly include rapid growth rates of population and
consumption, lack of valuation of ecological services, poverty,
ignorance of biophysical limitations, and use of ecologically
incompatible technologies. One of the major ecological tragedies of
the commons in a Mediterranean region of Turkey is the loss of Lake
Amik at the expense of increasing the area of croplands, which used
to provide vital ecosystem goods and services for the region. In
this study, we aimed at quantifying the effects of past land-use
transitions on soil organic carbon (SOC) pools (0-20 cm) in a
Mediterranean region of 3930 km2, between 1972 and 2000. LULC
changes were quantified from a time series of satellite images of
Landsat-MSS in 1972, Landsat-5 TM in 1987, and Landsat-7 ETM+ in
2000 using geographic information systems. The study showed that
the increase in croplands between 1972 and 1987 took place at the
expense of the irreversible losses of Lake Amik and its related
wetlands of over 53 km2. In the period of 1972 to 2000, croplands,
settlements, and evergreen forests increased by 174%, 106%, and
14%, respectively. The increase in settlements occurred mostly to
the detriment of croplands. Given the average rates of all the
land-use transitions, and associated changes in SOC density for the
study region of 3930 km2, total SOC pool was estimated to decrease
by 14.1% from 130.1 Mt in 1972 to 111.7 Mt in 2000.



