Climate and land use change can influence susceptibility to erosion and consequently
land degradation. The aim of this study was to investigate in the baseline and a future period,
the land use and climate change eects on soil erosion at an important dam watershed occupying a
strategic position on the narrow Strait of Hormuz. The future climate change at the study area was
inferred using statistical downscaling and validated by the Canadian earth system model (CanESM2).
The future land use change was also simulated using the Markov chain and artificial neural network,
and the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation was adopted to estimate soil loss under climate and
land use change scenarios. Results show that rainfall erosivity (R factor) will increase under all
Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios. The highest amount of R was 40.6 MJ mm
ha1 h1y1 in 2030 under RPC 2.6. Future land use/land cover showed rangelands turning into
agricultural lands, vegetation cover degradation and an increased soil cover among others. The change
of C and R factors represented most of the increase of soil erosion and sediment production in the
study area during the future period. The highest erosion during the future period was predicted to
reach 14.5 t ha1 y1, which will generate 5.52 t ha1 y1 sediment. The dierence between estimated
and observed sediment was 1.42 t ha1 year1 at the baseline period. Among the soil erosion factors,
soil cover (C factor) is the one that watershed managers could influence most in order to reduce soil
loss and alleviate the negative eects of climate change.