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Article

A Spatiotemporal Assessment of Land Use and Land Cover Changes in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Arshaly District, Kazakhstan

by
Onggarbek Alipbeki
1,*,
Chaimgul Alipbekova
2,
Arnold Sterenharz
3,
Zhanat Toleubekova
1,
Meirzhan Aliyev
1,
Nursultan Mineyev
1 and
Kaiyrbek Amangaliyev
1
1
Department of Land use and Geodesy, S.Seifullin Kazakh Agro Technical University, Zhengis avenue, 62, Nur-Sultan 010000, Kazakhstan
2
Department of Plant protection and Quarantine, S.Seifullin Kazakh Agro Technical University, Zhengis avenue, 62, Nur-Sultan 010000, Kazakhstan
3
EXOLAUNCH GmbH, Reuchlin str. 10, 10553 Berlin, Germany (Spin-off Company from the Technical University of Berlin, Germany)
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2020, 12(4), 1556; https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041556
Submission received: 14 January 2020 / Revised: 15 February 2020 / Accepted: 16 February 2020 / Published: 19 February 2020
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Urban and Rural Development)

Abstract

:
In this study, the spatiotemporal dynamics of land use and land cover (LULC) were evaluated in the peri-urban area of the Arshaly district, which borders the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan. Landsat multispectral images were used to study the changes in LULC. The analysis of LULC dynamics was carried out using supervised classification with a multi-temporal interval (1998, 2008, and 2018). During the study period, noticeable changes occurred in LULC. There was an increase in the area of arable land and forests and a reduction in the pastures. There was a sharp increase in the built-up area; that is, there was an intensification of land use through an increase in the share of arable land as well as the transformation of agricultural land for development. However, in general, the influence of urban sprawl in this peri-urban area has so far been accompanied by only a slight focus on its sustainable development.

1. Introduction

Urban sprawl has been observed throughout the world, and there is concern about its impact on peri-urban areas (PUAs) [1,2,3]. Often, peri-urbanization occurs spontaneously with unpredictable consequences and casts doubt on the sustainable development of a region. It has been established that the growth and development of a large city and its interaction with the PUA are influenced by three main factors: economic development, the intensity of trade growth, and political motivation on the part of the state aimed at the growth and development of cities [4]. As for the city of Nur-Sultan (Tselinograd, Akmola, Astana), which is the capital of Kazakhstan, and the surrounding areas, all three of the above factors work quite effectively. For example, over the past 20 years (1998–2018), the capital of Kazakhstan transformed from a provincial regional city into a large metropolis as a result of the combined impact of the above three factors and became the political, economic, and cultural center of the republic [5]. In the adjacent agro-industrial areas, under the influence of the metropolis, certain changes also took place during the study period, both under the influence of urban sprawl [6] and other factors [7], which still require analysis and evaluation.
As a rule, urban expansion is associated with a loss or change in the intensity of use of agricultural lands [3,8,9,10,11,12]. Therefore, the assessment of changes occurring in the PUA is mainly carried out through studies of changes in land use and land cover (LULC) [13]. Information on changes in the LULC structure is vital for the proper planning, management, and use of natural resources as well as for protecting the environment [14]. Assessing LULC changes helps to better understand the relationship between people and the environment to optimally manage resources and to use them for sustainable development [15,16]. Therefore, tracking systems for the process of LULC have been created using remote sensing (RS) at different levels [17]. Of particular importance is the instrumental assessment of the long-term spatiotemporal changes of LULC in the PUAs that are under their influence [18,19], which explains the need to increase the number of studies in this direction [20].
Land use and land cover are two different terms that are usually evaluated in combination since the former (physical properties of surface elements) and the latter (human use of land cover) cannot be considered independent of each other [21]. Thus, LULC is the result of human interaction with the environment, which is affected by changes in socioeconomic processes. By assessing changes in the long-term structure of LULC and by focusing on the main processes, it is possible to determine the drivers of these phenomena and to take effective measures for the sustainable development of the area of interest (AOI) [22].
There are many methods and tools for classifying and evaluating LULC variations. In particular, the use of multiple RS data provides continuous and accurate LULC status information. RS data, combined with geographic information systems (GIS), are used to assess LULC changes in a wide range of natural resource parameters at the local level [23,24,25], including agricultural land in PUAs. In Kazakhstan, intensive land-use studies, including RS- and GIS-based studies, started in the 1990s [26]. In the initial stages, these studies mainly aimed at preliminary assessments of damage from ineffective land use during the Soviet era, which led to serious environmental consequences of, for example, the Aral Sea, the former Semipalatinsk nuclear test site, the Baikonur cosmodrome, and the development of minerals and hydrocarbons, etc. [27,28,29,30,31]. An active study of land use in the northern grain-growing regions of the republic was launched in 2002 when the first project funded by the Ministry of Agriculture of Kazakhstan started monitoring the timing of crops and forecasting the future harvest of annual grain crops and the completeness of their harvesting [32]. As a rule, land-monitoring research within the grain region ended with the fulfilment of the objectives of each study year. In connection with the advent of Kazakhstan’s space system [33], the number of objects subject to annual satellite monitoring has gradually expanded [34,35]. When assessing the impact of various factors on land use, RS and GIS methods are most often used (52%) [36]. There are currently studies underway using RS and GIS data to study long-term changes in LULC in individual regions of the country. These works are devoted to the study of land-use changes outside the direct influence of urban sprawl [37,38,39,40] or only in the city itself [41]. At the same time, a comprehensive assessment of the impact of large cities of Kazakhstan on the surrounding agricultural areas using long-term spatiotemporal data series remains open for determining sustainable development approaches for both cities and PUAs.
Based on the preceding, our main goal was to identify drivers that affect LULC change in the Arshaly district, which borders the Nur-Sultan metropolis. The objectives of the study were to evaluate the changes in LULC in the AOI based on the use of multitemporal RS data (1998, 2008, and 2018) as well as to assess the degree and consequences of the influence of these drivers on the sustainable development of this PUA.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Area

The research area selected was the Arshaly district, Akmola oblast, which is located on the eastern border of the capital of the Republic of Kazakhstan, the city of Nur-Sultan. Previously, Nur-Sultan was called Tselinograd, Akmola, and Astana. The AOI is limited by the following longitudes and latitudes: in the north, 72°08′06,4″ E, 51°26′27.5″ N; in the east, 73°10′11.4″ E, 50°24′32.3″ N (Figure 1). The digital elevation model (DEM) is based on the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data [42].
The study areais located within the Kazakh Uplands, with low mountainous relief in the east. The central part is hilly; the north and west are characterized by a slightly undulating plain. In the eastern part of the AOI, natural birch–aspen trees are often found. The climate of the study area is continental and is part of the dry steppe zone. Winters are cold and lengthy, with an average temperature of −17 °C in January; summers are moderately warm, with an average temperature of 20 °C in July. The average annual rainfall is 300–350 mm. The Esil River flows through the district; its length, including the small tributaries in the district, is 125 km. Most of the small rivers dry up in the summer. There are more than forty large and small lakes. In the district, there are three artificial reservoirs, namely, Astana, Kenetay, and Bersuat. The water levels of these reservoirs are subject to seasonal changes; they increase in spring and decrease in autumn, but the surface area of the reservoirs themselves hardly change. Arshaly district is one of the leading agricultural areas of the Akmola region. The main agricultural activity of the region is grain production. The Nur-Sultan–Karagandy and Nur-Sultan–Pavlodar railroads as well as the republican-level Nur-Sultan–Karaganda highway pass through the Arshaly district. The Arshaly district covers an area of 584.7 thousand ha, of which 469.8 thousand ha areagricultural land. The centre of the district is located in the relatively large village of Arshaly. There are 12 rural cantons (separate territorial units with local jurisdiction but within the district administration) and 35 settlements, including small railway stations, which have terminals for receiving and storing grain [43]. The population of the district in 2019 was 27,404 people [44].

2.2. Data

Landsat 5 and 8 multispectral data obtained from the United States Geological Survey website [45] were used to study changes in LULC in the AOI. Landsat images (spatial resolution 30 m), geometrically corrected to UTM (Universal Transverse Mercator), zone 42 to the north, and WGS-1984 (World Geodetic System), were used. As shown in Table 1, each satellite dataset has information about four spectral bands that correspond to blue (B), green (G), red (R), and near-infrared (NIR). We used the false color composite (FCC), consisting of the four channels B, G, R, and NIR, received from the Landsat 5 and 8 satellites as well as color-balanced mosaics based on them from two unclouded images that cut along the border of the district. Images were used to identify and classify agricultural land and built-up areas in the study area in the multi-time periods of 1998, 2008, and 2018.

2.3. Ancillary Data

To compile basic maps and to interpret RS data, thematic maps were used by the Automated Information System of the State Land Cadastre [46], which in turn were obtained from the National Cartographic and Geodetic Fund of the Republic of Kazakhstan [47]. Based on these, geodatabases were compiled, which were used to collect training samples, to conduct ground-truthing, to evaluate the accuracy of the classification, and to determine the real ownership of land.

2.4. Methods for Classifying and Accuracy Assessment

For the first level of classification, the following five LULC classes were used according to CORINE [48], as seen in Table 2: arable land, pastures, water, forest, and built-up areas.
We used the supervised classification of the LULC, the task of which was to detect objects of already known types in the images, which required some preliminary knowledge about the studied area of the Earth’s surface. The maximum likelihood classifier (ML) was used for the supervised classification in this particular study. The ML classifier is one of the most widely used, extremely simple, and easily implemented algorithm. Moreover, ML is very well known and has already been successfully applied to a broad range of remote-sensing problems [49,50]. Therefore, in this particular study, supervised classification was conducted using the image processing software ArcGIS (version 10.6.1) for LULC classification.
After initial supervised classification, the LULC map was edited based on ground verification of doubtful areas and some classes were recoded into their respective classes. Ground-truthing verification was done on those particular areas that were not clear in the classification. In this process, land-use and land-cover maps were prepared initially and the confusing spots were identified. For each class, i.e., arable land, pastures, water, forest, and built-up areas, at least twelve points were marked. An exhaustive ground-truthing of the study area was carried out, and some corrections were subsequently made. The ground reference data used for the image classification were further applied for the purpose of accuracy assessment.
After ground-truthing, an accuracy assessment was carried out, which is the most important way to assess the reliability of amap. No image classification is said to be complete unless its accuracy has been assessed. To determine the accuracy of classification, a sample of pixels was selected on the classified image and their class identities were compared with the ground reference data. In this study, the classification error matrix (or confusing matrix) was used, which is acommon means of expressing the classification accuracy. In the error matrix, the overall classification confidence indicator is defined as the number of correctly classified points located along the diagonal of the table (in %). This number may be random. To take this fact into account when summarizing the results, the so-called coefficient or K (Kappa) index, which corrects for randomness, is often used. Kappa analysis is a discrete multivariate technique that calculates the producer’s and user’s overall accuracy as well as the Kappa accuracy level.
The Kappa index is calculated by the following formula [51]:
K = (d–q)/(N–q)
where d is the number of cases where the result is obtained correctly (the sum of the values on the diagonal of the error matrix) and where q is the number of random results calculated in terms of the number of random results in rows nc and true results in columns nr of the correspondence matrix, calculated as follows:
q = ∑ nc nr/N
where N is the total number of points.
For absolutely accurate results (all N points on the diagonal), Kappa is 1, and for a purely random hit, Kappa is 0.
After accuracy assessment and correction, the class-wise areas of the 1998, 2008, and 2018 mosaics were calculated. In LULC classification, change detection is a very important process, which was done after the completion of the calculation and analysis of the land-use land-cover classes from the 1998, 2008, and 2018 mosaics. By using the change-detection option in ArcGIS software, the differences between the three mosaics of the Arshaly district for all five LULC classes were computed. The integral structure of the methodological approach that we used is shown in the block diagram in Figure 2.
Thus, the methodological approaches we used to classify LULC and to evaluate its accuracy were repeatedly tested and found reliable enough to be able to automate these processes.

3. Results

3.1. Overall LULC Changes

The results of the classification of the LULC change showed that the area of agricultural land (arable land and pastures) as well as water bodies, forests, and built-up areas over the years of the research underwent relative changes, as shown on the LULC maps of 1998, 2008, and 2018 (Figure 3).
Examples of changes in the LULC class areas from 1998 to 2018 are shown in Figure 4.
The results of the LULC classification for the 1998–2018 period are shown in Table 3, which indicates that, during the years of observation, about 95% of the area was occupied by arable land and pastures. For example, in 1998, they were 94.9%; in 2008, they were 94.8%; and in 2018, they were 94.6%. At the same time, there were marked changes in the composition of these two land-use groups. We found a steadily increasing trend in the area of arable land, mainly through the ploughing of pastures. From 1998 to 2008, the areas occupied by arable land increased by 1.0% or 28.9 km2 and, from 2008 to 2018, by 0.8% or 21.3 km2. At the same time, the rangelands of the district decreased by 1.3% or 35.2 km2 from 1998 to 2008 and by 1.1% or 29.2 km2 from 2008 to 2018. Over the entire observation period, the area of pastures decreased by 2.4% or 64.4 km2, of which 50.2 km2 was developed for arable land. A typical example of the expansion of arable areas due to the ploughing of pastures is shown in Figure 4A.
The area of water bodies that united more than forty small and medium-sized lakes in different years amounted to 3.8–3.9%. Relatively small changes in the area of water bodies were mainly associated with the seasons when Landsat images of the study area were obtained. Thus, Landsat images from 1998 were used, which were taken in the fall (September), and from 2008, which were from the end of July when the water bodies were shallow due to evaporation during the hot periods of the year, as seen in Figure 4B. Images of the administrative area in 2018 were obtained in the second half of spring (May) during the period of the maximum catchment by water bodies. Therefore, in 2018, the maximum area of the AOI’s water bodies was noted.
Forest areas in the district occupied less than one percent (0.8–0.9%). At the same time, we found that the areas used for growing trees increased noticeably, mainly due to the expansion of previously existing forests. For example, in 2008, the area of land occupied by forests was 10.5% or 4.5 km2 higher than that in 1998 and, in 2018, the area increased by 22.2% or 9.5 km2. An example of an increase in the area of forest stands can be seen in Figure 4C. It should be emphasized that the increase in the forest area in the region was due to the creation and expansion of the green zone of the capital of the republic.
Urban areas occupied only 0.5–0.6% of the entire AOI. However, the proximity of the capital of the republic had a significant impact on the change in urban areas. The most profound changes occurred near the border of the capital, the city of Nur-Sultan (Figure 4D). From 1998 to 2008, the urbanized areas of the district increased by 7.0% or 2.1 km2, and from 2008 to 2018, the area of increase was 8.1% or 2.6 km2. For the entire period, i.e., from 1998 to 2018, the total area of settlements compared with the beginning of our observations increased by 15.6% or 4.7 km2.

3.2. Classification Accuracy

The overall accuracy and Kappa coefficient show that the classification results are quite reliable (Table 3). Thus, the overall classification accuracy varied between 92.1% and 98.3%. The Kappa coefficient for the classified images of 1998 was 0.88; for 2008, it was 0.87; and for 2018, it was 0.94.
For each classified group, the difference in the accuracy between the producers and the users was relatively small (Table 4). For example, for arable land, producer accuracy varied from 93.9% to 95.9%; for pastures, from 91.7% to 95.1%; for water, from 98.9% to 99.5%; for forest, from 94.8% to 98.8%; and, for built-up areas, from 89.5% to 96.4%. User’s accuracy was found in even smaller intervals and, for all classified groups, varied from 92.0% to 99.7%. Since the overall accuracy exceeded 90%, the research results could be considered quite acceptable for both the user and the producer. That is, the results of evaluating the classification accuracy and their errors convincingly showed the reliability of the work we performed and paved the way for automating thematic mapping processes for LULC classification results.

4. Discussion

The approach we adopted of using Earth observation systems to estimate the spatiotemporal changes in LULC is at present the most common. This is confirmed by the fact that, based on this approach, semiautomatic tracking systems for LULC are created at the global [52], regional [53], and national [54] levels, which indicate the methodological validity of the direction of our work.
The process of urban expansion as well as changes in the land-use structure of the PUA is caused by many factors and is a complex socioeconomic process that goes through several stages, namely stagnation (control of urbanization), acceleration (openness to urbanization), etc. [55]. The composition and strength of the influence of these factors on the dynamics of LULC vary depending on the history of events and the prevailing situations in the particular region and country being studied [56,57,58]. We conducted the first assessment of LULC change in the Arshaly agro-industrial district of Akmola Oblast in 20 years, which is the PUA of the Nur-Sultan metropolis. Our results showed strong spatial and temporal dynamics of LULC from 1998 to 2018. Next, we considered the role of the most significant factors influencing LULC change and sustainable development of the study area, taking into account the results of our work as well as those of others.

4.1. Urban Sprawl and Population Growth

Urbanization is becoming a global trend [59], and it is expected that, by 2050, 68 percent of the world’s population will be urban dwellers. An increase in the number of urban residents is usually accompanied by expansion of the city into agricultural land [60]. Kazakhstan is no exception [61]. At the present stage, Kazakhstan is characterized by intensive growth in the number and proportion of the urban population. During the 1996–2015 period, the level of urbanization in the country increased from 55.8% to 57.0% and the urban population increased by 16.6%. A feature of Kazakhstan is an increase in the population of large cities, while the population in medium-sized and small cities is decreasing. One of the areas of economic growth and, accordingly, the attraction of migrants is the city of Nur-Sultan. As the capital, it is the center of the resettlement systems of international, national, interregional, and regional significance. It combines them with transport systems and forms the supporting spatial framework of the country [62]; all of this is accompanied by urban expansion. For example, strong land expansion by the city of Nur-Sultan was shown in Reference [41]. From 1992 to 1999, the pace of urban development was relatively low. The largest expansion of the built-up areas of the capital occurred from 1999 to 2010, when growth occurred mainly in the central part of the city. At approximately the same pace, the expansion of land by the megalopolis continued from 2010 to 2016, and this period was characterized by the appropriation of mostly marginal areas. By 2018, the increase of new developments in the main city of the republic slowed down but continued [63]. In general, the area of land occupied by this metropolis from 1998 to 2018 increased almost three fold—from 258 km2 to 797.3 km2 [5]—and this happened as a result of the seizure of land that had been used for the most part for agricultural purposes. Along with the land expansion, there was an increase in the population of the capital [64]. From 1992 to 1998, i.e., during the six years preceding the formation of the new capital of Kazakhstan, the number of city residents remained almost unchanged. A noticeable increase in the city’s population occurred four years later (2002) after the regional city was declared the main city of the country. In subsequent years (2005–2019), there was a strong positive trend in population growth.

4.2. Peri-Urban Area

In the PUA, the share of arable land has been steadily increasing since 1998 (Table 3). Apparently, these lands were open until the collapse of the USSR. However, at the beginning of Kazakhstan’s transition to a market economy, many lands were abandoned or at least they were not ploughed and were used mainly as pastures [65,66]. The reason for not ploughing the land is the socioeconomic situation prevailing not only in Kazakhstan but also in many post-communist countries from 1990 to about the beginning of 2000 [67,68,69,70]. The development of this phenomenon was facilitated by the loss of a guaranteed grain sales markets and by the deterioration of price relations between the value of manufactured products and their sale during the transition period. One of the important factors was the mass migration of nonindigenous people to the territory of the republic who came to Kazakhstan as a result of developing virgin lands [71]. For example, the population of the Arshaly district center constantly decreased from 1989 to 2004 [72]. After approval by the capital of the republic of the city of Nur-Sultan (Astana), the population decline stopped. A second rise in the number of villagers in the village occurred in 2009 when the most effective economic transformations were taking place in the country [73]. However, apparently due to the attraction of the metropolis, a steady outflow of the population subsequently occurred. This situation as described is typical of PUAs for almost all major urban metropolitan areas of Kazakhstan [61]. One of the driving factors for increasing the share of arable land in the Arshaly district is primarily the proximity of the Nur-Sultan metropolis. The economic activity of this fast-growing metropolis has contributed to an increase in land-use intensity without population growth.

4.3. Accessibility

Transport accessibility is assumed to be the main driver of urbanization [74,75,76] and city extensions intothe PUA. Accessibility is usually assessed in terms of connecting the AOI to transportation infrastructure (roads, railways, and airways), which facilitate communication with the main metropolitan area. A significant part of the urban expansion is likely to occur as a result of the improvement of the Nur-Sultan roads, which are attractive for both residents and enterprises. Thus, it is precisely along the axis of the republican-level highway between Nur-Sultan and Karaganda on the border with the Arshaly district and the metropolis that there was a strong increase in the built-up area (Figure 4D).

4.4. Economic and Legal Factors

Economic growth is one of the main drivers [59] that push urban expansion into the PUA. For example, affordable land in the PUA attracts new immigrants. The expansion process in the PUA is very beneficial when the price of the converted land (from agriculture to buildings) is several times higher than the price of the same agricultural land. Besides, almost all agricultural land in the PUA is available for market transactions, so agricultural land is relatively easy to buy and sell [77]. For these reasons, land speculation is very common in these areas. The same is true for the study area [78]. On the other hand, since urban expansion into agricultural land is officially limited [79], the government of the republic cannot speed up planning procedures to manage urban expansion in the PUA [80]. In terms of the governance of the city of Nur-Sultan, the seizure of land within the PUAfor urban development is carried out exclusively through the decrees of the President of Kazakhstan, which is a rather complicated process. In addition, at the level of the country’s government, a system of measures was adopted, aimed at the sustainable development of the Astana (Nur-Sultan) agglomerations along with their PUAs [81]. These measures are aimed at restraining the growth of the city and at improving the environment, including the creation of a green framework around urban agglomerations in the form of forest stands [82,83], which explains the increase in the forested area in the AOI.

5. Conclusions

We studied the spatiotemporal changes of LULC of the Arshaly district, which is within the PUA of the fast-growing metropolis Nur-Sultan. Using multitemporal Landsat images for 1998, 2008, and 2018, five categories of land were classified (arable land, pastures, water bodies, forest, and built-up areas). As a result, the main trends of the influence of the fast-growing large city on the change in the structure of the LULC in the agricultural district were identified. During the observation period, the following observations were made: there was a significant increase in arable land and a decrease in pasture land; the area of water bodies varied within the seasons, but no general trend of their increase or decrease was found; a steady increase in the area occupied by forest stands was noted; and the most active increase in built-up territories was observed on the border of the Arshaly district with the capital of the republic. The results obtained were reliable and are characterized by fairly high accuracy.
The analysis of factors influencing the sustainable development of the AOI showed that the most powerful drivers of the impact of the Nur-Sultan metropolis on the Arshaly district are the expansion of agricultural land; city population growth; development of transport infrastructure, which increases the accessibility of the city for new residents; and the systems of economic and legislative measures aimed at preventing the spontaneous development of urban sprawl. On the other hand, the increase in the area of cultivated land in the PUA is due to their abandonment after the collapse of the former USSR, which was caused by the economic recession and by the outflow of the population from the countryside to the city. In general, the system of measures adopted at the state level was aimed at the sustainable development of the Arshaly district.
The results of our research, based on the use of RS and GIS, are of considerable value. They contribute to the detection of changes in the composition of LULC in a semiautomatic mode and are useful for local residents, governments, and researchers in difference fields for the rapid identification and assessment of phenomena and processes in PUAs that do not correspond to the sustainable development of the study area. Overall, this study provides evidence that integrating GIS and open-access RS data constitutes a useful approach for the provision of baseline spatial information. Such spatial information is crucial for informed land-use planning to improve environmental sustainability.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, O.A. and Ch.A.; methodology, O.A.; formal analysis, A.S. and Zh.T.; investigation, M.A., N.M., and K.A.; writing—original draft preparation, O.A. and Ch.A.; visualization, M.A., N.M., and K.A.; supervision, O.A. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by The Committee of Science of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan under grant number 242 of 03/27/2018 and by The ERASMUS+ Programme of the European Unionwithin the framework of the Project “New and Innovative Courses for Precision Agriculture” (NICOPA) (project reference number 597985-EPP-1-2018-1-KZ-EPPKA2-CBHE-JP); however, this document reflects the views only of the authors, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use thatmay be made of the information contained herein.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Location and digital elevation map of the study area.
Figure 1. Location and digital elevation map of the study area.
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Figure 2. Methodology for LULC map generation.
Figure 2. Methodology for LULC map generation.
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Figure 3. LULC map of the Arshaly district after classification of Landsat mosaics in 1998, 2008, and 2018 into five classes: arable lands, pastures, water, forest, and built-up areas. Agricultural lands occupies the main part of the study area (~95%) (arable lands: 2747.0–2797.2 km2, pastures: 2634.4–2698.8 km2), water: ~3.8–3.9%, forests: ~0.8–0.9%, and built-up areas:~0.5–0.6%.
Figure 3. LULC map of the Arshaly district after classification of Landsat mosaics in 1998, 2008, and 2018 into five classes: arable lands, pastures, water, forest, and built-up areas. Agricultural lands occupies the main part of the study area (~95%) (arable lands: 2747.0–2797.2 km2, pastures: 2634.4–2698.8 km2), water: ~3.8–3.9%, forests: ~0.8–0.9%, and built-up areas:~0.5–0.6%.
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Figure 4. Examples of changes in the LULC class areas from 1998 to 2018: (A) Arable lands, (B) water, (C) forest, and (D) built-up area.
Figure 4. Examples of changes in the LULC class areas from 1998 to 2018: (A) Arable lands, (B) water, (C) forest, and (D) built-up area.
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Table 1. Satellite images and their characteristics.
Table 1. Satellite images and their characteristics.
SatelliteSensorYear/Month/DayNo. of BandsSpectral CompositionWavelength (µm)
Landsat 5TM1998/09/17
1998/09/17
1Visible Blue0.45–0.52
2Visible Green0.52–0.60
3Visible Red0.63–0.69
4NIR0.76–0.90
Landsat 5TM2008/07/26
2008/07/26
1Visible Blue0.45–0.52
2Visible Green0.52–0.60
3Visible Red0.63–0.69
4NIR0.76–0.90
Landsat 8OLI2018/05/19
2018/05/19
2Blue0.45–0.51
3Green0.53–0.59
4Red0.63–0.67
5NIR0.85–0.88
Table 2. Land-use and land-cover (LULC) classes of the study area.
Table 2. Land-use and land-cover (LULC) classes of the study area.
Level 1Level 2
Arable landWheat, barley, sunflower, alfalfa, different types of fallows
PasturePastures, meadows, deposits
ForestDeciduous, coniferous, mixed, forest nurseries, shrubs
Built-up areaSettlements, industrial zone
Table 3. LULC area, area difference, classification accuracy, and Kappa statistics.
Table 3. LULC area, area difference, classification accuracy, and Kappa statistics.
847+39AreaArea of Difference (km2)
1998200820181998–20082008–20181998–2018
km2%km2%km2%
Arable land2747.047.92775.948.42797.248.728.91.021.3
Pasture2698.847.02663.646.42634.445.9–35.2–1.3–29.2
Water220.83.8220.53.8220.83.6–0.3–0.10.3
Forest42.80.847.30.852.30.94.510.55.0
Built-up area30.10.532.20.634.80.62.17.02.6
Total5739.51005739.51005739.5100
Overall accuracy (%) 93.7 92.1 98.3
Kappa 0.88 0.87 0.97
Table 4. Producer’s and user’s accuracy of LULC classification of study area.
Table 4. Producer’s and user’s accuracy of LULC classification of study area.
*LULC Classes199820082018
Producer’sUser’sProducer’sUser’sProducer’sUser’s
195.392.093.995.195.995.3
291.795.094.893.595.195.7
398.996.799.299.799.599.7
494.896.198.897.698.896.4
589.596.298.296.496.498.2
*1—Arable land, 2—pasture, 3—water, 4—forest, and 5—built-up area.

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Alipbeki, O.; Alipbekova, C.; Sterenharz, A.; Toleubekova, Z.; Aliyev, M.; Mineyev, N.; Amangaliyev, K. A Spatiotemporal Assessment of Land Use and Land Cover Changes in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Arshaly District, Kazakhstan. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041556

AMA Style

Alipbeki O, Alipbekova C, Sterenharz A, Toleubekova Z, Aliyev M, Mineyev N, Amangaliyev K. A Spatiotemporal Assessment of Land Use and Land Cover Changes in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Arshaly District, Kazakhstan. Sustainability. 2020; 12(4):1556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041556

Chicago/Turabian Style

Alipbeki, Onggarbek, Chaimgul Alipbekova, Arnold Sterenharz, Zhanat Toleubekova, Meirzhan Aliyev, Nursultan Mineyev, and Kaiyrbek Amangaliyev. 2020. "A Spatiotemporal Assessment of Land Use and Land Cover Changes in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Arshaly District, Kazakhstan" Sustainability 12, no. 4: 1556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041556

APA Style

Alipbeki, O., Alipbekova, C., Sterenharz, A., Toleubekova, Z., Aliyev, M., Mineyev, N., & Amangaliyev, K. (2020). A Spatiotemporal Assessment of Land Use and Land Cover Changes in Peri-Urban Areas: A Case Study of Arshaly District, Kazakhstan. Sustainability, 12(4), 1556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041556

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