Geospatial Analysis of Land Use and Land Cover Change: A Case Study of catchment area of Ramganga river, Uttarakhand

Paper Details
Manuscript ID: 2126-0419-8384
Vol.: 2 Issue: 4 Pages: 103-109 Apr - 2026 Subject: Geography, Planning And Development Language: English
ISSN: 3068-1995 Online ISSN: 3068-109X DOI: https://doi.org/10.64823/ijter.2604012
Abstract

In the last ten years, the Kaladhungi area of Nainital district has undergone notable changes in land use influenced by socio-economic, environmental, and institutional elements. Historically focused on agriculture, the area is now experiencing a slow transition to non-agricultural pursuits, such as industrial growth and fruit tree farming. Diminishing interest from young people, shortages in labour, and heightened susceptibility to climate fluctuations have diminished the sustainability of conventional farming methods. As a result, numerous farmers are transforming farmland into orchards or selling it for commercial use, pursuing greater financial gains and less reliance on labour. Simultaneously, agricultural producers encounter various obstacles, including water shortages, conflicts with wildlife, soil deterioration, scattered land ownership, and restricted market opportunities, which all threaten the sustainability of farming. Policy measures, such as land reform rules and environmental safeguards, aim to manage land conversion and maintain ecological balance; nonetheless, gaps in implementation remain. Local governments, using a multi-level governance structure, are essential in overseeing land use changes, balancing progress with ecological preservation. The research underscores that the current transition from agriculture to other land uses signifies a wider rural change, raising worries about the sustainability of agriculture and livelihood security over time in the Himalayan area

Keywords
Land Use and Land Cover (LULC) Change Agricultural Transformation Himalayan Region Socio-Economic Drivers
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Cite this Article

Aprajit Puri (2026). Geospatial Analysis of Land Use and Land Cover Change: A Case Study of catchment area of Ramganga river, Uttarakhand. International Journal of Technology & Emerging Research (IJTER), 2(4), 103-109. https://doi.org/10.64823/ijter.2604012

BibTeX
@article{ijter2026212604198384,
  author = {Aprajit Puri},
  title = {Geospatial Analysis of Land Use and Land Cover Change: A Case Study of catchment area of Ramganga river, Uttarakhand},
  journal = {International Journal of Technology &  Emerging Research },
  year = {2026},
  volume = {2},
  number = {4},
  pages = {103-109},
  doi =  {10.64823/ijter.2604012},
  issn = {3068-109X},
  url = {https://www.ijter.org/article/212604198384/geospatial-analysis-of-land-use-and-land-cover-change-a-case-study-of-catchment-area-of-ramganga-river-uttarakhand},
  abstract = {In the last ten years, the Kaladhungi area of Nainital district has undergone notable changes in land use influenced by socio-economic, environmental, and institutional elements. Historically focused on agriculture, the area is now experiencing a slow transition to non-agricultural pursuits, such as industrial growth and fruit tree farming. Diminishing interest from young people, shortages in labour, and heightened susceptibility to climate fluctuations have diminished the sustainability of conventional farming methods. As a result, numerous farmers are transforming farmland into orchards or selling it for commercial use, pursuing greater financial gains and less reliance on labour.
  Simultaneously, agricultural producers encounter various obstacles, including water shortages, conflicts with wildlife, soil deterioration, scattered land ownership, and restricted market opportunities, which all threaten the sustainability of farming. Policy measures, such as land reform rules and environmental safeguards, aim to manage land conversion and maintain ecological balance; nonetheless, gaps in implementation remain. Local governments, using a multi-level governance structure, are essential in overseeing land use changes, balancing progress with ecological preservation.
  The research underscores that the current transition from agriculture to other land uses signifies a wider rural change, raising worries about the sustainability of agriculture and livelihood security over time in the Himalayan area
  },
  keywords = {Land Use and Land Cover (LULC) Change, Agricultural Transformation, Himalayan Region, Socio-Economic Drivers},
  month = {Apr},
}
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Copyright © 2025 Authors retain the copyright of this article. This article is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.