Abstract:
Sediment movement is the most critical problem in Ethiopia, notably in the Ketar River watershed, which is located in the Rift
Valley Basin. e Ketar River ows through rugged terrain with steep slopes and high sediment movement. e purpose of the
study is to evaluate the Soil and Water Assessment Tool’s (SWAT) ability to simulate sediment and to identify areas that are
vulnerable to soil erosion. is will aid water resource planners in determining the appropriate corrective action. In SWAT
sediment sensitivity analysis, the USLE soil erodibility factor (USLE-K) is found to be the most sensitive sediment parameter. e
SWAT model sediment simulation performance is evaluated using the coe cient of determination (R2
) and Nash-Sutcli e
E ciency (NSE). e model performance results in R2 and NSE values of 0.69 and 0.55 for calibration and 0.73 and 0.51 for
validation, respectively, using the SWAT Calibration and Uncertainty Program (SWAT-CUP). e sediment-prone area sub basins have steep slopes and were mostly covered by cultivated land. Annual sediment yield from cultivated land was ap proximately 1872.12 t/y, while yield for moderately cultivated grassland was 171.45 t/y. Woodland and forest land have less soil
erosion rate. e subbasin highly covered by Eutric Nitisols is found in very high soil erosion-prone areas. Sediment yield from a
slight slope is almost zero, whereas sediment yield from steep and very steep slopes is very high. e slope of the subbasin is an
important factor in determining sediment yield, followed by land cover and soil types. e very high sediment yield rate area
accounted for 39.64% of the total subbasin and it needs soil conservation planning.