Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing

The potential of forest to regenerate after harvesting is a key element for sustainability of the ecosystem. For semi-arid tropical savanna environments, managing resprouts after tree cutting is ideally suited because of the natural ability of many indigenous species to regenerate vegetatively. Rege...

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Main Authors: Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril, Savadogo, P., Sawadogo, L., Zida, D., Tiveau, D., Oden, P.C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20845
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author Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril
Savadogo, P.
Sawadogo, L.
Zida, D.
Tiveau, D.
Oden, P.C.
author_browse Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril
Oden, P.C.
Savadogo, P.
Sawadogo, L.
Tiveau, D.
Zida, D.
author_facet Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril
Savadogo, P.
Sawadogo, L.
Zida, D.
Tiveau, D.
Oden, P.C.
author_sort Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The potential of forest to regenerate after harvesting is a key element for sustainability of the ecosystem. For semi-arid tropical savanna environments, managing resprouts after tree cutting is ideally suited because of the natural ability of many indigenous species to regenerate vegetatively. Regeneration in this ecosystem is, however, prone to many disturbance factors such as fire and grazing by livestock. In this paper, we used a factorial experiment to examine the long-term effects of annual early burning and grazing on dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after selective cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of Burkina Faso, West Africa Burning decreased shoot mortality of Crossopteryx febrifuga while grazing increased that of Detarium microcarpum. Burning, in later measurement years, reduced resprouts' size of Acacia macrostachya, C. febrifuga and D. microcarpum while an increased basal area was observed for Combretum glutinosum. There was no significant evidence of grazing hampering growth. Moderate livestock grazing could be integrated in the forest management prescriptions in Burkina Faso for the sake of multi-purpose uses, while more attention should be paid to burning practices to lower fire severity, as complete fire exclusion is utopian in this savanna ecosystem.
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spelling CGSpace208452025-01-24T14:12:54Z Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril Savadogo, P. Sawadogo, L. Zida, D. Tiveau, D. Oden, P.C. regeneration intensive cropping livestock ecology disturbance tropical forests ecosystems The potential of forest to regenerate after harvesting is a key element for sustainability of the ecosystem. For semi-arid tropical savanna environments, managing resprouts after tree cutting is ideally suited because of the natural ability of many indigenous species to regenerate vegetatively. Regeneration in this ecosystem is, however, prone to many disturbance factors such as fire and grazing by livestock. In this paper, we used a factorial experiment to examine the long-term effects of annual early burning and grazing on dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after selective cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of Burkina Faso, West Africa Burning decreased shoot mortality of Crossopteryx febrifuga while grazing increased that of Detarium microcarpum. Burning, in later measurement years, reduced resprouts' size of Acacia macrostachya, C. febrifuga and D. microcarpum while an increased basal area was observed for Combretum glutinosum. There was no significant evidence of grazing hampering growth. Moderate livestock grazing could be integrated in the forest management prescriptions in Burkina Faso for the sake of multi-purpose uses, while more attention should be paid to burning practices to lower fire severity, as complete fire exclusion is utopian in this savanna ecosystem. 2011 2012-06-04T09:15:14Z 2012-06-04T09:15:14Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20845 en Dayamba, S.D., Savadogo, P., Sawadogo, L., Zida, D., Tiveau, D., Oden, P.C. 2011. Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing . Annals of Forest Science 68 (3) :555-564. ISSN: 1286-4560.
spellingShingle regeneration
intensive cropping
livestock
ecology
disturbance
tropical forests
ecosystems
Dayamba, Sidzabda Djibril
Savadogo, P.
Sawadogo, L.
Zida, D.
Tiveau, D.
Oden, P.C.
Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title_full Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title_fullStr Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title_full_unstemmed Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title_short Dominant species' resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the Sudanian savanna-woodlands of West Africa: long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
title_sort dominant species resprout biomass dynamics after cutting in the sudanian savanna woodlands of west africa long term effects of annual early fire and grazing
topic regeneration
intensive cropping
livestock
ecology
disturbance
tropical forests
ecosystems
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20845
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