Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies (Aug 2024)

Spatiotemporal lakes surface area changes over 35 years and potential causes in the Central Rift Valley, Ethiopia

  • Tolossa Lemma Tola,
  • Ke Zhang,
  • Abebe D. Chukalla,
  • Linxin Liu,
  • Gazi Tawfiq Ezaz,
  • Elsayed Ahmed Elsadek,
  • Mohammed Abdallah

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54
p. 101863

Abstract

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Study Region: Central Rift Valley (CRV) region, Ethiopia. Study Focus: The study aims to investigate the spatiotemporal change in lake water surface extents over 35 years (1986–2020) and identify potential causes. Three alternative multispectral water indices—Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI), Automatic Water Extraction Index (AWEI), and Modified Normalized Difference Water Index (MNDWI)—derived from Landsat sensors (TM, ETM+, OLI) were utilized to extract and analyze the lake surface area. The Mann-Kendall correlation was applied to examine whether hydro-meteorological and anthropogenic variables are possible causes for changes. New Hydrological Insights for the Region: MNDWI outperforms other indices with over 96 % accuracy in mapping lake surface area. Lake Abiyata experienced the most significant reduction in surface area from 1986 to 2020 (>50 %), followed by Lake Ziway (<2 %) while Lake Langano remained relatively stable. This significant reduction positively correlates to alterations in lake water depth (R2=0.92). Factors such as increased temperature, evaporation, and water abstraction for soda ash production negatively correlated with lake surface area, while inflow from Bulbula River and mean annual rainfall showed positive correlations. Abiyata Lake's decrease in surface area is primarily attributed to water abstraction for soda-ash manufacturing and incoming river flow. If the current trends in water abstraction from the Lake and income water diversion continue, there is a high possibility that Lake Abiyata will change into a terminal lake shortly.

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