Land use/land cover changes due to gold mining in the Singida region, central Tanzania: environmental and socio-economic implications

坦桑尼亚中部辛吉达地区金矿开采引起的土地利用/土地覆盖变化:环境和社会经济影响

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Abstract

This study explored the land use and land cover (LULC) changes (1995-2023) in the gold mining hotspots of Mang'onyi, Sambaru, and Londoni in the Singida region of Tanzania. The study integrated remote sensing (RS) to evaluate the LULC transitions with social survey assessments (83 respondents) to determine the resident's perceptions of the environmental, social, and economic implications of mining bridging technical data with socio-economic realities. Supervised classification of Landsat images was conducted using the random forest (RF) classifier to generate LULC maps with five classes (bareland, agricultural land, forest, built-up, and shrubs and grasses), followed by an analysis to identify LULC change trends. The results showed an overall increase in agricultural land 168.51 km(2) (587.55%), bareland 7.70 km(2) (121.45%), and built-up areas 0.55 km(2) (134.15%), while forest and shrubs and grasses areas declined by 97.67 km(2) (- 72.59%) and 79.09 km(2) (- 43.49%), respectively. A social survey assessment revealed residents perceived environmental (deforestation, biodiversity loss, land degradation, water, air, soil pollution), social (occupational hazards, land use conflicts, negative effects on livelihoods and culture, discrimination, child labor, community displacement), and economic (improved housing, infrastructural development, job creation, economy boost, improved access to services) impacts resulting from mining activities. Our findings underscore the importance of balancing the economic benefits of gold mining with the imperative to protect the environment and support sustainable livelihoods in the mining regions.

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