Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya

In the highlands of Western Kenya, intensified land use combined with low use of mineral fertilizers at farm level is driving soil nutrient depletion and declining yield levels. All farms and individual field crop plots are surrounded by life fences and the area under such hedge structure is estimat...

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Main Authors: Theobald, Tim F. H., Mussgnug, Frank, Becker, Mathias
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2014
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165477
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author Theobald, Tim F. H.
Mussgnug, Frank
Becker, Mathias
author_browse Becker, Mathias
Mussgnug, Frank
Theobald, Tim F. H.
author_facet Theobald, Tim F. H.
Mussgnug, Frank
Becker, Mathias
author_sort Theobald, Tim F. H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the highlands of Western Kenya, intensified land use combined with low use of mineral fertilizers at farm level is driving soil nutrient depletion and declining yield levels. All farms and individual field crop plots are surrounded by life fences and the area under such hedge structure is estimated to cover 3–5% of the total farmland area. The land below the hedges is not tilled and may receive nutrient and carbon inputs by the occasional addition of field crop residues and litter fall. We hypothesized that the areas covered by live fences represent not only an important land resource, but are also largely untapped sites characterized by high soil fertility in an otherwise largely degraded environment. We characterized physico‐chemical attributes of top soils collected on farmland and from adjacent live fences composed of five different fencing species in representative environments of Kakamega district (sandy Acrisol and bimodal rainfall distribution vs. clay Ferralsol and monomodal rainfall distribution). In addition, the maize production potential of these soils was assessed in a supplementary pot experiment. Concentrations and total amounts of soil C, N, N supplying capacity, exchangeable K, as well as aggregate stability tended to be higher in hedge structures than in field crop soil. The amount of labile (permanganate‐oxidizable) carbon and the carbon management index in fence lines on Acrisol were similar to those of the adjacent Kakamega rain forest reserve, while they were reduced by > 50% in crop fields. These trends were reflected in the biomass and N and K uptake by maize in potted soil. Effects were generally larger in Acrisol than in Ferralsol and were most pronounced with Tithonia diversifolia. We conclude that live fences are soil fertility hotspots that may be valorised in the future by replacing the generally unproductive fencing species with economical perennial crops.
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spelling CGSpace1654772025-02-19T14:24:29Z Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya Theobald, Tim F. H. Mussgnug, Frank Becker, Mathias In the highlands of Western Kenya, intensified land use combined with low use of mineral fertilizers at farm level is driving soil nutrient depletion and declining yield levels. All farms and individual field crop plots are surrounded by life fences and the area under such hedge structure is estimated to cover 3–5% of the total farmland area. The land below the hedges is not tilled and may receive nutrient and carbon inputs by the occasional addition of field crop residues and litter fall. We hypothesized that the areas covered by live fences represent not only an important land resource, but are also largely untapped sites characterized by high soil fertility in an otherwise largely degraded environment. We characterized physico‐chemical attributes of top soils collected on farmland and from adjacent live fences composed of five different fencing species in representative environments of Kakamega district (sandy Acrisol and bimodal rainfall distribution vs. clay Ferralsol and monomodal rainfall distribution). In addition, the maize production potential of these soils was assessed in a supplementary pot experiment. Concentrations and total amounts of soil C, N, N supplying capacity, exchangeable K, as well as aggregate stability tended to be higher in hedge structures than in field crop soil. The amount of labile (permanganate‐oxidizable) carbon and the carbon management index in fence lines on Acrisol were similar to those of the adjacent Kakamega rain forest reserve, while they were reduced by > 50% in crop fields. These trends were reflected in the biomass and N and K uptake by maize in potted soil. Effects were generally larger in Acrisol than in Ferralsol and were most pronounced with Tithonia diversifolia. We conclude that live fences are soil fertility hotspots that may be valorised in the future by replacing the generally unproductive fencing species with economical perennial crops. 2014-10 2024-12-19T12:55:06Z 2024-12-19T12:55:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165477 en Wiley Theobald, Tim F. H.; Mussgnug, Frank and Becker, Mathias. 2014. Live fences $1 (B a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya. J. Plant Nutr. Soil Sci., Volume 177 no. 5 p. 758-765
spellingShingle Theobald, Tim F. H.
Mussgnug, Frank
Becker, Mathias
Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title_full Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title_fullStr Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title_short Live fences – a hidden resource of soil fertility in West Kenya
title_sort live fences a hidden resource of soil fertility in west kenya
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165477
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