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GLOBAL ADVANCED RESEARCH JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY AND REGIONAL PLANNING (GARJGRP) ISSN: 2315-5108

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Vol. 1(5) October 2012

 

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Global Advanced Research Journal of Geography and Regional Planning (GARJGRP) ISSN: 2315-5108

October 2012 Vol. 1(5), pp 088-098
Copyright © 2012 Global Advanced Research Journals

 

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Localised Environmental Degradation Due to the Offshoots of Highway Development Projects: The Case of Central Ethiopian High Lands.

 

Solomon Addisu1, Mekuria Argaw2,Hameed sulayman3

 

1. Environmental Science; Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia (PhD, Research Scholar at Andhra University, India),

2. PhD; Ecology; PO Box 1176; Addis Ababa Ethiopia

3. PhD in Environmental Science; PO Box 1176; Addis Ababa Ethiopia

 

*Corresponding Author’s E-mail: Soladd2000@yahoo.com

 

Accepted 10 October, 2012

 

Abstract

 

Ethiopia provides a well-known example of a severely degraded African environment with consequent implications for food insecurity and famine. Physical land degradation after road building has been observed in Central Ethiopian highlands through gully erosion. In this research work by using a number of methods such as Field observation, gully measurement, GIS technique ,the 1997and 2006 topomap and socio-economic questionnaires, the impacts of the road on land degradation has been studied. It investigates how highway construction in the Ethiopian Highlands affects the gully erosion risk by quantifying the catchement area before and after road construction, the number of gullies created, and its characteristics in two selected cases: Addis Ababa-Fiche and Addis Ababa-Ambo. Accordingly; since the building of the road, 17 new gullies were created immediately downslope of the studied road segmensts and 8 other gullies at a radical change in its dimensions. The average catchement area is now 58.28 hectares and 74.52 on the road segments of Fiche and Ambo respectively, which is significantly different (p<0.001) from the average  pre-road catchment  area of 8.45 and 14.52 hectares  (paired average). The total surface area occupied by gullies in the side of Fiche road and in the side of Ambo road transects was about 63,892.6 m2 and 59,214.25 m2 respectively .The volume of soil loss was calculated between 12,530.38 m3 and 71,420 m3 from each road segments. The result of statistical analysis indicates that variation of the gully length contributed 95% of variation in the volume of soil loss. The Gully density (5.7m/ha to 14.06m/ha) implies that the sampled roadside areas were moderately to severely degraded. The damages and associated problems of the gullies, as explained by farmers, include loss of land, dissection of farms, and deposition of sediments on growing crops and in extreme cases putting agricultural fields out of production. Hence roads should be designed in a way that keeps runoff interception, concentration and deviation minimal. Techniques must be used to spread concentrated runoff in space and time and to increase its infiltration instead of directing it straight onto unprotected slopes.

 

Keywords: Gully erosion Risk, catchment area, Road design, Ecological destructions.