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Urban growth and fuelwood distribution in dry tropical Africa: A | 40225
Journal of Geology & Geophysics

Journal of Geology & Geophysics
Open Access

ISSN: 2381-8719

+44 1478 350008

Urban growth and fuelwood distribution in dry tropical Africa: A next challenge for sustainable management of protected areas


2nd International Convention on Geosciences and Remote Sensing

November 08-09, 2017 | Las Vegas, USA

Gervais Wafo Tabopda

Georgia Institute of Technology, USA

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Geol Geophys

Abstract :

Protected areas in tropical dry Africa appear to be excellent support structures for the sustainable management of natural resources. However, they are increasingly subject to anthropogenic pressures linked to the dual factor of urban growth and domestic energy needs. It is the case of the Laf-Madjam Forest Reserve (5000 ha) in Cameroon, located 60 kilometers south of the city of Maroua (350,000 inhabitants). Since the late 1980s, this forest reserve has become the main area for the exploitation of fuelwood for households in the city of Maroua, where two forest reserves disappeared in the 1970s, under the pressure of timber harvesting. The decline of woody vegetation following the timber harvesting and the lack of public policy strategy for reforestation and management of cuts in Laf-Madjam Forest Reserve, profoundly disturb the ecosystem of this protected area, which would represent both a climate regulator and a shelter of the vegetal cover in the whole of the Diamare plain. This paper, which focuses on the interactions between urban areas and protected areas in relation to energy needs in the Far North region of Cameroon, presents a dual thematic and methodological concern. First, it aims at better understanding of the difficult integration of conservation policies in urban functions in sub-Saharan Africa and secondly, to implement a study approach adapted to the analysis of the relationships between cities and protected areas in a context of obvious environmental vulnerability. The remote sensing data enabled us to highlight the dynamics of vegetation cover in this reserve between 1986 and 2015, using GIS analysis. Multispectral Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM+) satellite images from 1986, 2001 and 2010 were acquired and pre-processed. Multidate hybrid classification of the images was performed and four land use/land cover classes (woody savanna, shrub savanna, crops, little bare ground vegetation) was derived. The post-classification change detection techniques were performed to characterize and quantify changes in land cover and land use. The results show a decrease of the vegetation cover since 1986 with a rate of 0.51% per year. Thus, between 1986 and 2015, the clear forest and the savannah, mainly woody species have experienced a considerable decline. The dynamics of the woods characterized by satellite image processing and GIS tools is the consequence of the ever increasing demand for fuelwood in the surrounding localities. Moreover, field observations and analyses of fuelwood distribution flows in the city of Maroua enable us to highlight the contribution of the protected areas in this activity. More than 40% of the fuelwood distributed in the city of Maroua comes from protected areas (i.e., around 700 m3 of volume per year) with an estimated average consumption of 0.9 kg per household per day.

Biography :

Gervais Wafo Tabopda has completed his PhD in Geography and Regional Planning from University of Orleans in France in September 2008. He is a Lecturer in College of Design at Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech). He was a Lecturer at the University of Orleans in France and Head of Research Division at The Center of Innovation of Orleans. He has published several papers in reputed French journals in the field of remote sensing and geographic information systems. He currently teaches introduction to GIS (Geographic Information System), environmental GIS and remote sensing to undergraduate and graduate students at School of City Regional Planning.

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