- Tanko Binibonori Salihu1, Mohammed Abubakar Husian2 and Abdulrahman Ismaila Belell3
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19442624
- SSR Journal of Multidisciplinary (SSRJM)
Urbanization in sub-Saharan Africa is
accelerating at an unprecedented rate, fundamentally transforming land cover
systems and intensifying environmental pressures. While extensive research has
focused on megacities, medium-sized urban centers remain insufficiently studied
despite their growing importance in regional development. This study examines
the spatio-temporal dynamics of Land Use/Land Cover (LULC) transformation
across residential density gradients in Jimeta, Nigeria, between 2015 and 2025,
and evaluates the associated thermal implications.
Multi-temporal Landsat imagery was
analyzed using supervised classification techniques to generate LULC maps for
2015, 2020, and 2025. Post-classification comparison and transition matrices
were employed to quantify land cover changes, while one-way Analysis of
Variance (ANOVA) assessed statistical differences across time periods. The
results reveal a clear density-dependent transformation pattern: high-density
zones exhibited structural saturation with built-up land exceeding 95%,
medium-density zones experienced the most rapid transformation with built-up
expansion from 61% to 77%, and low-density zones showed gradual peri-urban
transition.
Despite observable spatial changes,
ANOVA results indicate no statistically significant differences in mean
land-use areas across the study periods (p > 0.05), suggesting incremental
rather than abrupt transformation processes. The progressive replacement of
vegetated surfaces with impervious materials has significant thermal consequences,
reinforcing the principles of the Urban Heat Island Effect.
The study highlights the vulnerability of medium-density transitional zones and underscores the need for climate-responsive urban planning strategies. By providing empirical evidence from a medium-sized Nigerian city, this research contributes to broader discussions on sustainable urbanization in rapidly developing regions.

