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Monitoring river channel dynamics using remote sensing and GIS techniques

journal contribution
posted on 2019-03-25, 00:00 authored by PK Langat, L Kumar, Richard KoechRichard Koech
River channel dynamics are natural autogenic occurrences for fluvial rivers with influences from humanmodifications and climatic factors. Remote sensing and geographic information systemtools and techniques, aerial photographs, and satellite imagery have been used to determine epochal channel erosion, accretion, and unchanged locations along Tana River, Kenya's longest river. Six reaches within a 142-kmSaka-Mnazini stretchwere studied by comparing sequential changes in the position of the channel in 1975–1986, 1986–2000, 2000–2017, and 1975–2017 epochs.Manual and automatic digital processing procedures and GIS tools were applied to visualize and quantify the reach-wise spatial and temporal morphological changes. The erosion and accretion channel changes over the study period were observed and quantified at all reaches. Meandering and switching off or abandoning the main active channel was also illustrated. The potential driving forces of morphological changes included varying hydrological regime, upstreamland use practices, nature of channel gradient, and riparian vegetation occurrence changes.We found no clear evidence to link river regulationwith the river channel dynamics. Results deliver the latest evidence on the dynamics of Tana River. This information is crucial for understanding river evolution characteristics and aid in planning and management at the lower reaches which has remained poorly understood.Use of remote sensing data in concert with GIS provides efficient and economical quantitative spatial and temporal analysis of river channel changes.

History

Volume

325

Start Page

92

End Page

102

Number of Pages

11

eISSN

1872-695X

ISSN

0169-555X

Publisher

Elsevier, Netherlands

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2018-10-09

External Author Affiliations

University New England

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Geomorphology