Disentangling climate and human drivers of land degradation in East and Southern Africa

cg.authorship.typesCGIAR and advanced research instituteen
cg.contributor.affiliationInternational Institute of Tropical Agricultureen
cg.contributor.affiliationUniversity of Hamburgen
cg.contributor.initiativeClimate Resilience
cg.contributor.programAcceleratorClimate Action
cg.coverage.countryZambia
cg.coverage.countryTanzania
cg.coverage.countryMalawi
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2ZM
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2TZ
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2MW
cg.coverage.regionAfrica
cg.coverage.regionEastern Africa
cg.creator.identifierJulius Manda: 0000-0002-9599-5906en
cg.howPublishedFormally Publisheden
cg.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.5600en
cg.identifier.iitathemeSOCIAL SCIENCE & AGRICUSINESSen
cg.identifier.iitathemeBIOMETRICSen
cg.isijournalISI Journalen
cg.issn1085-3278en
cg.journalLand Degradation and Developmenten
cg.reviewStatusPeer Reviewen
cg.subject.actionAreaResilient Agrifood Systems
cg.subject.iitaAGRIBUSINESSen
cg.subject.iitaAGRONOMYen
cg.subject.iitaCLIMATE CHANGEen
cg.subject.iitaCROP SYSTEMSen
cg.subject.iitaBIOMETRICSen
cg.subject.iitaFOOD SCIENCEen
cg.subject.iitaLAND USEen
cg.subject.iitaFOOD SECURITYen
cg.subject.impactAreaNutrition, health and food security
cg.subject.impactPlatformClimate Change
cg.subject.impactPlatformNutrition, Health and Food Security
dc.contributor.authorMuthoni, F.K.en
dc.contributor.authorManda, J.en
dc.contributor.authorDubovky, O.en
dc.date.accessioned2025-04-29T11:37:16Zen
dc.date.available2025-04-29T11:37:16Zen
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/174374
dc.titleDisentangling climate and human drivers of land degradation in East and Southern Africaen
dcterms.abstractTimely monitoring of land degradation (LD) is essential to guide targeting the sustainable land management (SLM) practices to the suitable context that assists in achieving an LD neutral world. This study applied a 40-year time series of remote sensing data representing vegetation indices and rainfall to identify the hotspots for the climatic and human-induced LD or improvements in the East and Southern Africa (ESA) region. This was complemented by a field assessment of LD and SLM practices applied by farmers in Tanzania. Remote sensing analysis at the regional scale identified hotspots in the ESA region that experienced statistically significant LD and improvement trends primarily driven by human and climatic factors during two temporal segments from 1983 to 2005 (T1) and 2006–2022 (T2). The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) trends exhibited a browning-to-greening trend reversal between T1 and T2 in northern Zambia and Tanzania, contrasting with persistent browning in Central Malawi and southern Zambia. At the local scale, severe LD in Kongwa district of Tanzania was primarily caused by erosion by water, wind, and unsustainable exploitation of natural vegetation, although their magnitude varied over different landscape gradients. These collaborated with the remotely sensed browning trend observed in the Kongwa district, but the greening plots were largely smoothened out by coarse-resolution NDVI data. The regional scale identification of factors driving the greening or browning trends provides a first-instance evidence-based sampling frame for future studies to identify the actual practices applied in the greening zone that can be used to rehabilitate the degraded land.en
dcterms.accessRightsLimited Access
dcterms.audienceScientistsen
dcterms.available2025-04en
dcterms.bibliographicCitationMuthoni, F. K., Manda, J. & Dubovky, O. (2025). Disentangling climate and human drivers of land degradation in East and Southern Africa. Land Degradation & Development, 1— 16.en
dcterms.extent1-16en
dcterms.issued2025en
dcterms.languageen
dcterms.licenseCopyrighted; all rights reserved
dcterms.subjectclimateen
dcterms.subjectbrowningen
dcterms.subjectland degradationen
dcterms.subjectcropsen
dcterms.subjectyieldsen
dcterms.typeJournal Article

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