Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge

Several global, regional, and national efforts have been exerted to address the impacts of land degradation on ecosystems and people’s livelihoods. However, studies integrating local and scientific knowledge to assess the benefits and disbenefits of these efforts are lacking. We used Halaba, Ethiopi...

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Autores principales: Tegegne, Desalegn, Sieber, S., Uckert, G., Girma, R., Moges, A., Mekuria, Wolde
Formato: Resumen
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175703
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author Tegegne, Desalegn
Sieber, S.
Uckert, G.
Girma, R.
Moges, A.
Mekuria, Wolde
author_browse Girma, R.
Mekuria, Wolde
Moges, A.
Sieber, S.
Tegegne, Desalegn
Uckert, G.
author_facet Tegegne, Desalegn
Sieber, S.
Uckert, G.
Girma, R.
Moges, A.
Mekuria, Wolde
author_sort Tegegne, Desalegn
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Several global, regional, and national efforts have been exerted to address the impacts of land degradation on ecosystems and people’s livelihoods. However, studies integrating local and scientific knowledge to assess the benefits and disbenefits of these efforts are lacking. We used Halaba, Ethiopia, as a case study, and combined local and scientific knowledge to (i) examine the societal challenges, (ii) assess the drivers, pressures, state, impact, and responses to land degradation, and (iii) evaluate the benefits and disbenefits of adopted sustainable land management (SLM) practices. The study identified diverse land resources, with agricultural land being the most crucial for livelihoods. Community insights and the spatial analysis revealed uneven distribution of land resources, affecting equitable access to these resources by the different groups of communities. The study revealed seasonal variations in land resource availability, such as water and livestock feed, driven by rainfall patterns, suggesting the need to expand water infrastructure and feed development interventions. Dependency on land resources varies by gender and wealth, with men relying on agricultural land, women on a wider range of resources, wealthier households favouring farmland and grazing land, and poorer households depending on forests and community ponds. These results suggest the need for inclusive and tailored SLM practices to ensure equitable resource use. Changes in human behaviour have put pressure on land resources, causing environmental, social, and economic shifts, including ecosystem degradation, food insecurity, migration, school dropouts, loss of human life and livestock, and increased poverty. A range of physical and biological SLM practices was implemented to mitigate these impacts. Insights from local and scientific knowledge highlighted significant environmental, economic, and social benefits of these interventions, such as restoring degraded ecosystems, improving vegetation composition and biodiversity, rehabilitating gullies, controlling soil erosion, conserving moisture, increasing agricultural productivity, and improving access to essential resources like fuelwood, water, and livestock feed. We suggest integrating local knowledge, ensuring social inclusivity, and balancing physical and biological conservation measures in future planning and design of SLM practices. Prioritizing affordable, low-cost technologies, maintaining consistent follow-up and community incentives, and scaling successful practices with long-term investment will enhance ecological restoration and livelihood resilience.
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spelling CGSpace1757032025-09-22T10:45:33Z Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge Tegegne, Desalegn Sieber, S. Uckert, G. Girma, R. Moges, A. Mekuria, Wolde sustainable land management ecosystem services equity land degradation land resources land use land cover Several global, regional, and national efforts have been exerted to address the impacts of land degradation on ecosystems and people’s livelihoods. However, studies integrating local and scientific knowledge to assess the benefits and disbenefits of these efforts are lacking. We used Halaba, Ethiopia, as a case study, and combined local and scientific knowledge to (i) examine the societal challenges, (ii) assess the drivers, pressures, state, impact, and responses to land degradation, and (iii) evaluate the benefits and disbenefits of adopted sustainable land management (SLM) practices. The study identified diverse land resources, with agricultural land being the most crucial for livelihoods. Community insights and the spatial analysis revealed uneven distribution of land resources, affecting equitable access to these resources by the different groups of communities. The study revealed seasonal variations in land resource availability, such as water and livestock feed, driven by rainfall patterns, suggesting the need to expand water infrastructure and feed development interventions. Dependency on land resources varies by gender and wealth, with men relying on agricultural land, women on a wider range of resources, wealthier households favouring farmland and grazing land, and poorer households depending on forests and community ponds. These results suggest the need for inclusive and tailored SLM practices to ensure equitable resource use. Changes in human behaviour have put pressure on land resources, causing environmental, social, and economic shifts, including ecosystem degradation, food insecurity, migration, school dropouts, loss of human life and livestock, and increased poverty. A range of physical and biological SLM practices was implemented to mitigate these impacts. Insights from local and scientific knowledge highlighted significant environmental, economic, and social benefits of these interventions, such as restoring degraded ecosystems, improving vegetation composition and biodiversity, rehabilitating gullies, controlling soil erosion, conserving moisture, increasing agricultural productivity, and improving access to essential resources like fuelwood, water, and livestock feed. We suggest integrating local knowledge, ensuring social inclusivity, and balancing physical and biological conservation measures in future planning and design of SLM practices. Prioritizing affordable, low-cost technologies, maintaining consistent follow-up and community incentives, and scaling successful practices with long-term investment will enhance ecological restoration and livelihood resilience. 2025-09 2025-07-21T08:57:40Z 2025-07-21T08:57:40Z Abstract https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175703 en Open Access Tegegne Mengistu, D.; Sieber, S.; Uckert, G.; Girma, R.; Moges, A.; Mekuria, W. 2025. Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge. Paper presented for the Annual Interdisciplinary Conference on Research in Tropical and Subtropical Agriculture, Natural Resource Management and Rural Development (Tropentag) on Reconciling Land System Changes with Planetary Health, Bonn, Germany, 10-12 September 2025. 1p.
spellingShingle sustainable land management
ecosystem services
equity
land degradation
land resources
land use
land cover
Tegegne, Desalegn
Sieber, S.
Uckert, G.
Girma, R.
Moges, A.
Mekuria, Wolde
Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title_full Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title_fullStr Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title_short Evaluating landscape management interventions in Ethiopia: insights from local and scientific knowledge
title_sort evaluating landscape management interventions in ethiopia insights from local and scientific knowledge
topic sustainable land management
ecosystem services
equity
land degradation
land resources
land use
land cover
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175703
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