Chapter 3 Land Use
Chapter 3 Land Use
Chapter 3 Land Use
CHAPTER 3
EMG 4101 Coastal Zone Management
Dr Rohasliney Hashim
"the arrangements,
activities and inputs
people undertake in a
certain land cover type to
produce, change or
maintain it" (FAO, 1997a;
FAO/UNEP, 1999)
Urban/built-up
land
Pasture/meadow
Barren
land/unproductive
Forest
Water
3/1/2013
Mangrove
Sandy
beaches
Sea grass
Ecosystem
Maintenance of habitat
Coral
reefs
Subtidal
rocky
shore
Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Environmental Studies, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia
Department of Forest Production, Faculty of Forestry, Universiti Putra Malaysia, 43400 Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia
a r t i c l e i n f o
a b s t r a c t
Article history:
Available online 28 June 2012
Drivers of coastal land use change (CLUC) were assessed between 1990 and 2006 in Selangor, Malaysia.
Land use maps for the state (Selangor, Malaysia) for 1990 and 2006 and their respective biophysical and
socio e economic data were obtained from the Malaysian departments of agriculture, survey and
statistics respectively. Vector maps of socio economic variables were prepared in a GIS environment. All
maps (land use maps and their potential drivers) were gridded and compared at three spatial scales
using logistic regression analysis. Results indicated that agricultural practises were particularly
responsible for coastal land use change. Coastal lands were converted to agricultural uses as a result of
increased accessibility, suitable slope and favourable climatic condition of the areas. Findings further
indicated that the impact of urbanization is just becoming an important factor of coastal land use change.
While efforts of the government at coastal resources restoration and conservation is commendable,
a political will is still required in achieving sustainable development of the coastal areas in order to full
the environmental component of the ongoing Vision 2020 economic development plan.
2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
1.1. Extent of coastal land and resources in Malaysia
A coastal zone is a transitional region between the terrestrial
and marine environment with features (Ong and Gong, 2001),
which makes it one of the most productive ecosystems in the world
(Woodroffe, 2002). A coast is composed of about 200 nautical miles
seaward and 5 kme10 km landward. Based on this denition,
Malaysian coastal area is estimated to consist of about 510,510 km2
(Ismail, 2011) sustaining about 4000 of 20,000 known species of
sh, 22 of 50 species of sea snakes, four of the seven species of sea
turtles (Ong and Gong, 2001), 64 of 200 species of hard and soft
corals and about 577,558 ha of mangrove (FAO, 2002; Tan and
Basiron, 2000) (Fig. 1 and Table 1).
Of these coastal resources, mangrove forest and coral reef are
important for providing natural breeding ground for sh (Ong and
Gong, 2001) timber for poles and charcoal (Chan et al., 1993) and
buffer against coastal erosion and ood (Chong, 2006). The multiple
functions supported by the coastal zone have lead to its extensive
exploitation (Dahuri, 2005; UNEP, 2001) for human economic
benets (Kates et al., 1990; Turner and Meyer, 1994; Serneels and
Lambin, 2001; Li and Yeh, 2004) particularly in the developing
economies where open market economic policies have caused
* Corresponding author. Tel.: 60 102933451; fax: 60 389466768.
E-mail address: aolibraheem2007@yahoo.com (A.O. Olaniyi).
0964-5691/$ e see front matter 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2012.05.029
114
Table 1
Size of mangrove forest (ha) and length of coastlines (km) by states in Malaysia.
1980
1991
1995
2000
Johore
Kedah
Kelantan
Melaka
Negeri Sem
Pahang
Perak
Perlis
Pulau Pinang
Sabah
Sarawak
Selangor
Terrengganu
Malaysia
35.2
14.4
28.1
13.4
32.6
26.1
26.1
32.2
8.9
19.9
18
34.2
42.9
34.2
48
33.1
33.7
39.4
42.5
30.6
30.6
54.3
26.7
32.8
38
75
44.6
51.1
51.8
36.9
35.7
44
44.7
31
31.9
60.5
30.4
35.2
43.4
82.6
45.1
54.7
56.4
42.1
39.4
49.8
47.6
33.7
33.7
67.8
35.3
38.2
50.5
89.4
45.7
58.8
States
Length of
coastline (Km)b
GR(ha)a
SL (ha)a
Total (ha)
Density
(ha/km2)
States
1980a
1990a
2000b
%
Conservation
area (ha)a
Perlis
Kedah
Penang
Perak
Selangor
Negeri Sembilan
Melaka
Johor
Pahang
Terengganu
Kelantan
Sarawak
Sabah
Total
20
148
152
230
213
58
73
492
271
244
71
1094
1743
4809
0
7248
451
43500
15,090
454
166
17,832
2675
1295
0
73,000
328,658
490,369
20
400
500
150
4500
200
100
6500
2000
1000
100
59,000
12,719
87,189
20
7648
951
43,650
19,590
654
266
24,332
4675
2295
100
132,000
341,377
577,558
0
52
6
190
92
11
4
49
17
9
1
121
196
120
Perlis
Kedah
Penang
Perak
Selangor
Negeri Sembilan
Melaka
Johor
Pahang
Terengganu
Kelantan
Sarawak
Sabah
Total
0
9037
406
40,869
28,243
1352
77
25,619
2496
2982
e
44,491
349,773
505,345
0
8034
406
40,869
21,983
1061
314
16,697
2032
954
e
36,992
316,460
445,802
0
7248
451
43,500
15,090
454
166
17,831
2675
1295
e
73,000
328,658
490,368
0
19.8
11.1
6.4
46.6
66.4
115.6
30.4
7.2
56.6
0.0
64.1
6.0
3.0
GR Gazetted reserves.
SL State land.
a
Tan and Basiron, 2000.
b
Ooi, 1996.
GR Gazetted reserves.
SL State land.
a
Tan and Basiron, 2000.
b
Ooi, 1996.
42
320
26
56
385
4840
5669
115
Fig. 2. a. Rate of urbanization in selected states of Malaysia (1980e2000). Source: MDoS online database. b. Population data of selected states in Malaysia 1930e2010. Source: MDoS
online database.
Fig. 3. a. GDP of selected states in Malaysia (1970e2009). Source: MDoS online database. b. Sectoral contribution to the GDP in Malaysia 1970e2005. Source: MDoS online database.
116
Table 4
Land use for major agricultural crops in Malaysia 1960e2010 (000 ha).
Year
Rubber
Oil palm
Cocoa
Coconut
Paddy
Fruits
Total
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
1753
2025
2019
1992
2007
1953
1881
1679
1560
1395
1185
55
97
291
642
1023
1468
2029
2539.5
3131
3461
3637
1
3
7
29
123
304
420
190.7
163.8
160.0
160.0
246
252
271
287
300
334
314
248.9
213.8
193.2
175.5
468
503
703
758
717
662
752
672.9
521.2
475.0
450.0
40
47
55
65
61
109
177
257.7
291.5
329.8
373.2
2563
2927
3346
3773
4231
4830
5573
5589
5881
6014
5981
Various sources; Arif and Tengku Mohd Ariff (2001 :2) quoted in Rasiah and Shahrin
(2007).
studies suggested that the land use and land use change and
their associated drivers are dynamic (Serneels and Lambin,
2001; Li and Yeh, 2004; Geist and Lambin, 2002; Lambin et al.,
2003) and are therefore required to be studied progressively
(Lambin et al., 2003; Chopra et al., 2009). Studies by (Abdullah
and Nakagoshi, 2006; Abdullah and Nakagoshi, 2007; Abdullah
and Hezri, 2008; Olaniyi et al., 2011) examined the impact of
socio e economic policies on general land use change in
Malaysia and coastal pollution (Ong, 2008) and none of the
studies addressed the drivers of coastal land use. The paucity of
literature in this area make this research useful in identifying in
quantitative terms, the drivers of coastal land use and thus
provide a link between these drivers of coastal land use and
coastal degradation recently experienced in some parts of
Peninsula Malaysia.
Therefore, the objective of this study is to investigate the
biophysical and socio economic drivers of coastal land use
change. The analysis of the relationships will give us the insight
into the factors that caused the coastal land use change for the
prediction of the future coastal land use change. Malaysian
coastal area is of extreme socio e economic and environmental
values (WTTC, 2007; Honey and Krantz, 2007). MPP e EAS (1999)
gave an estimate of a Malaysian mangrove swamps for storm and
ood control as US$ $222,000/km (values in terms of US$ 1995
prices). French (2001); Kremmer (2005) and Moller (2006),
highlighted the roles played by the Malaysian coastal forest in
protecting the country during the 2004 tsunamis incidence (NST,
2005).
Their studies indicated that mangroves swamps along the
Malaysians coastlines protected the country from the killer waves
(NST, 2005) unlike in the neighbouring countries {VietNam (Cat
Fig. 4. Agricultural land use for major agricultural crops in Malaysia (1960e2010) source: MDoA, 2010.
117
Climatic data
Demographic data
Soil data
Infrastructure data
Topographic data
Vector data
Slope data
Elevation data
Land use data:2006
Raster data
Abdullah and Hezri, 2008) and by the year 2000, agricultural land
use in Malaysia has increased to about 31% compared to 1974
(Abdullah and Hezri, 2008).
Extensive agricultural land use in Malaysia was found to be
associated with the implementation of economic policies {New
Economic Plan (NEP) and First to Third Malaysian Plans} between
1965 and 1980 (McMorrow and Abdul Talip, 2001; Jomo and others
cited in Abdullah and Hezri, 2008; Lim, 1997 cited in Siwar et al.,
2006; Abdullah and Nakagoshi, 2007).
2.1. Logistic models in land use and land use change analysis
The relationship between land use and its driving factors is
a complex, dynamic and non e linear process that is usually
accomplished by comparing land use with the location specic
characteristics at a pixel level (Karimi et al., 2010). These relationships have been successfully measured with the use of logistic
models (Equation (1)) (Serneels and Lambin, 2001; Verburg et al.,
2002, 2004; Peppler-lisbach, 2003; Lesschen et al., 2005).
LogitY a 1 X1 1 X1 2 X2 3 X3 k Xk
(1)
where
Y, dependent variable; a, constant of the equation; b1. bk,
coefcients the independent variables; X1 . Xk, the independent
variables.
The spatial relationships between dependent and a set of
independent variables are usually quantied in a two procedures.
Signicant variables contributing to the model will be selected
from a pool of several variables using a forward conditional logistic
regression method and the construction of multiple regression
analysis with the variables earlier selected (Verburg et al., 2004).
The use of stepwise regression procedure removes the problem of
multicollinearity amongst the predictor variables (Verburg et al.,
2004).
The coefcients (bs) of the logit model are the values for the
respective driving factor for a particular land use type. Values lower
than 1 mean that the probability will decrease upon an increase in
the value of the independent variables whereas, the values higher
than 1 indicates an increase in the probability upon an increase in
118
Table 5
Potential drivers of coastal land use (CLU).
Data
Land use maps
1990 & 2006
Soil variables
Soil pH
Soil CEC
Soil suitability
Soil terrain
Soil physical units
Soil series
Bio - geophysical variables
Slope
Elevation
Numbers of raining days
Total amount of rain per year
Average temperature
Minimum temperature
Maximum temperature
Demographic variables
Total population
Percentage rural population
Percentage urban population
Rural work force
Urban work force
Total population density
Accessibility variables
Distance to lake, river
Distance to major road
Distance to minor road
Distance to river
Major road density
Major rail density
Minor road density
Unit
Reference
Verburg
Verburg
Verburg
Verburg
Verburg
Verburg
and
and
and
and
and
and
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chen
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
(2000)
119
Table 6
a) Variables in coastal land use model. b) Detailed drivers of coastal land use in year 2006. c) Detailed drivers of coastal land use in year 1990.
a
Variables
1990
A. Socio e economics
Age above 65
Dependency ratio
Housing density
Percentage rural
residents
Rural work force
Distance to lake
Distance to major road
Distance to minor road
Minor road density
Major river density
Primary GDP
2006
250 m
200 m
150 m
250 m
200 m
150 m
5.28
0.43
e
1.88
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
1.02
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
0.33
e
0.18
e
e
0.04
e
e
e
1.37
12.34
0.27
e
e
e
e
L0.30
e
e
L1.08
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
2.02
3.09
e
e
e
e
e
e
L1.34
e
L3.11
0.96
L2.08
e
L1.99
L2.24
e
e
e
L21.3
e
e
L19.1
L0.78
L4.52
e
L2.05
L18.9
L1.60
e
e
e
0.76
0.68
1.62
e
e
e
e
0.37
C. Biophysical
CEC sub soil
CEC top soil
Elevation
Slope
0.09
e
e
0.38
2.35
e
e
0.33
0.87
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
1.11
e
0.69
0.72
1.07
e
0.90
0.69
e
e
e
0.51
e
e
e
e
0.22
0.73
e
3.17
3.77
e
D. Soil
Soil class
Soil group
Soil physical unit
Soil series
Soil suitability
Soil terrain
0.71
0.77
2.56
1.83
e
0.91
e
e
e
e
e
e
L0.28
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
e
E. Climatic
Maximum temp
Relative humidity
Numbers of raining days
Total rain
e
e
e
e
e
0.51
e
1.18
e
e
e
e
Constant
R2
ROC
8.96
0.79
0.99
20.03
0.47
0.98
L10.82
0.81
0.99
0.43
0.02
e
e
1.15
e
0.43
1.01
e
e
0.06
0.21
e
0.46
e
e
e
e
e
e
0.19
e
0.34
0.001
0.65
0.49
e
5.38
0.67
0.95
L7.84
0.69
0.97
e
e
0.17
e
7.43
0.37
0.91
b
Variables
S.E.
Wald
df
Sig.
Exp(B)
R2
ROC
19.93
4.522
2.049
18.933
21.267
1.599
19.103
0.776
0.492
0.646
0.266
1.076
7.836
248.251
0.074
0.069
433.438
574.299
0.038
221.767
0.038
0.008
0.019
0.008
0.015
0.1
0.006
3685.898
875.478
0.002
0.001
1768.516
0.007
425.234
3601.402
1178.153
1080.769
4912.606
6200.896
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0.936
0
0
0.965
0.97
0
0.931
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.011
0.129
0
0
0.202
0
0.46
1.635
1.907
1.304
0.341
0
0.688
0.965
Build e up LU
Oil palm LU
Paddy LU
a
Rubber LU
a
Coconut LU
Horticulture LU
a
Forest LU
Idle grass LU
No of raining days
Relative Humidity
Rural work force
Primary GDP
Constant
120
Table 6 (continued)
c
Variables
S.E.
Wald
df
Sig.
Exp(B)
R2
ROC
0.09
0.514
0.279
12.339
0.3
3.112
2.082
1.985
2.235
1.336
0.961
10.819
0.001
0.004
0.003
0.335
0.005
0.028
0.018
0.033
0.028
0.02
0.021
0.333
7177.532
20,188.63
10,954.623
1360.474
3359.422
12,243.389
13,525.912
3685.072
6177.137
4587.935
2146.29
1053.508
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.094
1.672
0.756
228,517.68
0.741
0.045
0.125
0.137
0.107
0.263
2.615
0
0.813
0.985
The best model that best describes the relationships between CLU and its driving factors were obtained at the spatial scales of 150 and 250 for 1990 and 2006 land use analysis
respectively. This assertion is evidenced in the ROC being 0.985 and 0.965 for coastal land use analysis (CLUA) in 1990 and 2006 respectively.
Explanation of statistic codes in Table 6aec.
b coefcient of independent variables.
Scales at which the best models were obtained for 1990 and 2006 analysis.
SE is the standard error around the coefcients.
Wald is a measure of the relative importance of each predictor in the model.
df is the degrees of freedom.
Sig (p Value) is a measure of how signicant a (predictor) is ? if less than 0.05 it mean that we would reject the null hypothesis and hence agreed that a predictor is making
a signicant contribution to the model.
Exp (b): is the change in the odds ratio associated with a unit change in the predictor variable.
R2 Nagelkerkes R2 is a measure of relationship between the predictors and the prediction.
ROC (Relative Operation Curve) is a measure of how well the independent variables correctly predict the value of the dependent variable.
a
insignicant.
Land use map of the study area for year 1990 and 2006 were
obtained from the Malaysian Department of Agriculture. The maps
were reclassied to map out the mangrove area, which was used as
proxy for the coastal areas. Discrete data of potential
socioeeconomic and biophysical factors (such as population
density, rural and urban work force, sectoral GDP, temperature)
driving coastal land use change were reformatted to digital maps.
Data of slope, elevation and soil maps were equally collected in
vector format and all data were rasterized at the same spatial
extent and geographical coordinates (Table 5).
Raster data were later converted into ASCII les to make them
suitable for statistical analysis (binary logistic regression). Each
ASCII data representing each variable was converted into a column
format using a short program written in MATLAB language (Luijten
et al., 2006).
The column data representing twenty seven potential spatially
explicit independent variables hypothesized to affect coastal land
use change and one for the dependent (CLUC) were assembled in
SPSS version 18. Variables driving CLUC were selected with a stepwise forward regression using binary logistic regression analysis at
0.05 signicance level (Verburg et al., 2004).
4. Results
Results for the binary logistic regression analysis of the driving
factors of coastal land use in Selangor, Malaysia were presented on
(Table 6aec). Actual factors driving coastal land use were presented
on Table 6b and c. For the year 1990, the driving variables of the
coastal land use change can be broadly categorised into three viz:
agricultural land use (coconut, rubber, paddy, oil palm, forest);
accessibility (distance to the minor road) and biophysical factors
(CEC, slope and soil group).
In 1990, the identied drivers of coastal land use change include
agricultural land use (primary GDP, oil palm, paddy, rubber,
coconut and horticultural crops); accessibility (distance to the
minor road) elevation (slope) and edaphic factor (soil group, CEC
sub soil). While, in the year 2006, important drivers of coastal land
use change include agricultural land use (primary GDP, oil palm,
121
environmental plans are mainstreamed into development programmes (Ninth Malaysian Plan). However, the achievement of this
objective particularly, in the coastal areas, has been hampered by
the constitutional devolution of powers between the federal and
the state governments (Vincent and Rasali, 2005). This constitutional provision saddles the authority of land administration on the
state governments (McMorrow and Abdul Talip, 2001) thus limiting
the ability of the federal government to enforce environmental
conservation laws on the states.
However, the hope of Malaysian coastal restoration and
conservation is not lost, given the available national constitutional
provisions, but there is a need for environmental education of all
stakeholders in order to harmonize of economic development goals
with environmental conservation objectives (Macintosh and
Ashton, 2002). The achievements of these (Malaysian coastal
restoration and conservation) objectives in the long term, however,
require strong political will (Chong, 2006) by the government at all
level particularly at the states.
6. Conclusion
Acknowledgement
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