Despite the common perception, most fatal landslides occur in human-transformed environments. Even on steep terrain, anthropogenic disturbances may fundamentally modulate landslides. Most of our knowledge regarding landslide-human interaction is restricted to local models or regional heuristic assessments based on empirical evidence. In this study, we used land-use–land-cover change as a metric to explain human pressure as a preconditioning factor for fatal landslide occurrences to provide a global overview. We addressed countries’ income levels, populations, exposure, and a dataset of ≈60 years of land-use–land-cover changes with mountainous landmasses to compare landslides and fatalities across 46 countries. Our statistical analyses show that land-use–land-cover changes have a substantially greater influence on the density of fatal landslides and landslide fatalities than physical factors such as topography and precipitation, especially in lower-income countries. We observed a marginal landslide impact when the land-use–land-cover change was low, regardless of the income class. Our results emphasize that effective land-use–land-cover planning is critical to decreasing landslide fatalities, especially in low- and lower-middle–income countries.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Fidan et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896676c1944d70ce07dd4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aec2739
Seçkin Fidan
Ankara University
Tolga Görüm
Abdullah Akbaş
Bursa Uludağ Üni̇versi̇tesi̇
Science Advances
University of Vienna
Istanbul Technical University
Ankara University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...