Detecting and Modeling the Changes of Land Use and Land Cover for Land Use Planning in Da Nang City, Vietnam

Detecting and Modeling the Changes of Land Use and Land Cover for Land Use Planning in Da Nang City, Vietnam

$55.00

Publication Date: 10th July 2018

Da Nang City, located in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam, has developed in many aspects in the last two decades and has been known as one of the five independent municipalities of Vietnam.... Read More
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Da Nang City, located in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam, has developed in many aspects in the last two decades and has been known as one of the five independent municipalities of Vietnam.... Read More
Description

Da Nang City, located in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam, has developed in many aspects in the last two decades and has been known as one of the five independent municipalities of Vietnam. Today, it constitutes the Key Economic Zone in Central Vietnam. Rapid industrialization and urbanization have caused incessant change of land use and land cover (LULC) in Da Nang City. Linh Nguyen's study aims at detecting, quantifying, and characterizing the changes of LULC in the Da Nang City region by using multitemporal satellite images from 1979 to 2009; it further explores the effects of LULC changes on landscape structure through spatial landscape metrics. In a simulation it also shows the changes of LULC under different scenarios, utilizing the model of system dynamics and the model of dynamic conversion of land use and its effects.

The results show that 37% of the total land has undergone change. Before being separated from Quang Nam Province (1979–1996), the LULC in Da Nang City changed gradually. However, after becoming an independent municipality, the LULC changed with accelerated speed, especially in the urban areas. Within 13 years (1996–2009), the urban area grew by 86.6%. The study suggests this is caused by a strong focus on economic development. Conversely, agriculture and forests had a high rate of change. The dynamic change of landscape indices reveal that agricultural areas were broken into smaller patches. However, except agriculture, patches of forestry and urban spaces tended to have a uniform landscape configuration. To simulate the future changes of LULC at Da Nang City from 2009 to 2030, three scenarios with different missions were developed, namely, Development as Usual, Aggressive Development, and Optimal Development. All scenarios result in a continuous increase in urban area and a gradual decrease in agriculture, barren, and shrub areas during the simulated period. The study provides new strategies for land use planning in comparable regions facing rapid urbanization.

Details
  • Price: $55.00
  • Pages: 250
  • Carton Quantity: 30
  • Publisher: Ibidem Press
  • Imprint: Ibidem Press
  • Series: Erdsicht - Einblicke in geographische und geoinformationstechnische Arbeitsweisen
  • Publication Date: 10th July 2018
  • Trim Size: 5.83 x 8.27 in
  • Illustration Note: 34 col. illustrations
  • ISBN: 9783838211367
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    ARCHITECTURE / Urban & Land Use Planning
Author Bio
Linh Nguyen graduated from the Faculty of Land Resources and Agricultural Environment at Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry, Vietnam. She acquired her Ph.D. in remote sensing at the Faculty of Geoscience and Geography at Goettingen University, Germany. Her main research interests are Remote Sensing and GIS in natural resource management and climate change as well as modeling in natural resource management.

Da Nang City, located in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam, has developed in many aspects in the last two decades and has been known as one of the five independent municipalities of Vietnam. Today, it constitutes the Key Economic Zone in Central Vietnam. Rapid industrialization and urbanization have caused incessant change of land use and land cover (LULC) in Da Nang City. Linh Nguyen's study aims at detecting, quantifying, and characterizing the changes of LULC in the Da Nang City region by using multitemporal satellite images from 1979 to 2009; it further explores the effects of LULC changes on landscape structure through spatial landscape metrics. In a simulation it also shows the changes of LULC under different scenarios, utilizing the model of system dynamics and the model of dynamic conversion of land use and its effects.

The results show that 37% of the total land has undergone change. Before being separated from Quang Nam Province (1979–1996), the LULC in Da Nang City changed gradually. However, after becoming an independent municipality, the LULC changed with accelerated speed, especially in the urban areas. Within 13 years (1996–2009), the urban area grew by 86.6%. The study suggests this is caused by a strong focus on economic development. Conversely, agriculture and forests had a high rate of change. The dynamic change of landscape indices reveal that agricultural areas were broken into smaller patches. However, except agriculture, patches of forestry and urban spaces tended to have a uniform landscape configuration. To simulate the future changes of LULC at Da Nang City from 2009 to 2030, three scenarios with different missions were developed, namely, Development as Usual, Aggressive Development, and Optimal Development. All scenarios result in a continuous increase in urban area and a gradual decrease in agriculture, barren, and shrub areas during the simulated period. The study provides new strategies for land use planning in comparable regions facing rapid urbanization.

  • Price: $55.00
  • Pages: 250
  • Carton Quantity: 30
  • Publisher: Ibidem Press
  • Imprint: Ibidem Press
  • Series: Erdsicht - Einblicke in geographische und geoinformationstechnische Arbeitsweisen
  • Publication Date: 10th July 2018
  • Trim Size: 5.83 x 8.27 in
  • Illustrations Note: 34 col. illustrations
  • ISBN: 9783838211367
  • Format: Paperback
  • BISACs:
    ARCHITECTURE / Urban & Land Use Planning
Linh Nguyen graduated from the Faculty of Land Resources and Agricultural Environment at Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry, Vietnam. She acquired her Ph.D. in remote sensing at the Faculty of Geoscience and Geography at Goettingen University, Germany. Her main research interests are Remote Sensing and GIS in natural resource management and climate change as well as modeling in natural resource management.