Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands

The effect of grazing cattle on vegetation was studied on a natural pasture during the rainy and dry seasons of 1995 in the Ethiopian highlands. The study used 0.01 ha plots, established on 0-4 percent and 4-8 percent slopes located close to each other at Debre Zeit research station, 50 km South of...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mwendera, E.J., Mohamed-Saleem, M.A., Woldu, Z.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28125
_version_ 1855541895390822400
author Mwendera, E.J.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Woldu, Z.
author_browse Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Mwendera, E.J.
Woldu, Z.
author_facet Mwendera, E.J.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Woldu, Z.
author_sort Mwendera, E.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effect of grazing cattle on vegetation was studied on a natural pasture during the rainy and dry seasons of 1995 in the Ethiopian highlands. The study used 0.01 ha plots, established on 0-4 percent and 4-8 percent slopes located close to each other at Debre Zeit research station, 50 km South of Addis Ababa. The grazing regimes were: light grazing stocked at 0.6 animal-unit-mouth per hectare (AUM ha-1); moderate grazing stocked at 1.8 AUH\M ha-1; heavy grazing stocked at 3.0 AUM ha-1; very heavy grazing stocked at 4.2 AUM ha-1; very heavy grazing on ploughed pasture stocked at 4.2 AUM ha-1; and a control of `no grazing'. Heavy grazing significantly reduced vegetative cover and biomass yields, especially on steeper slopes. Light to heavy grazing did not affect the botanical composition of the vegetation at both sites, but very heavy grazing resulted in species normally less preferred by animals dominating the botanical composition. Grazing did not have significant effect on ground vegetative cover on the 0-4 percent slope except at very heavy grazing pressure, but on the 4-8 percent slope even moderate grazing significantly reduced vegetative cover. Light to moderate grazing at the beginning of the dry period enhanced plant biomass productivity, while any grazing reduced plant productivity during the periods of reduced growth. Species richness increased with increasing grazing pressure compared with no grazing, but decreased sharply at very heavy grazing pressure. It is concluded that there is need for developing `slope and time specific' grazing management practices, and to assess short and long term effects of grazing and trampling on vegetation.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace28125
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1997
publishDateRange 1997
publishDateSort 1997
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace281252024-04-25T06:01:55Z Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands Mwendera, E.J. Mohamed-Saleem, M.A. Woldu, Z. highlands cattle grazing vegetation botanical composition biomass yields The effect of grazing cattle on vegetation was studied on a natural pasture during the rainy and dry seasons of 1995 in the Ethiopian highlands. The study used 0.01 ha plots, established on 0-4 percent and 4-8 percent slopes located close to each other at Debre Zeit research station, 50 km South of Addis Ababa. The grazing regimes were: light grazing stocked at 0.6 animal-unit-mouth per hectare (AUM ha-1); moderate grazing stocked at 1.8 AUH\M ha-1; heavy grazing stocked at 3.0 AUM ha-1; very heavy grazing stocked at 4.2 AUM ha-1; very heavy grazing on ploughed pasture stocked at 4.2 AUM ha-1; and a control of `no grazing'. Heavy grazing significantly reduced vegetative cover and biomass yields, especially on steeper slopes. Light to heavy grazing did not affect the botanical composition of the vegetation at both sites, but very heavy grazing resulted in species normally less preferred by animals dominating the botanical composition. Grazing did not have significant effect on ground vegetative cover on the 0-4 percent slope except at very heavy grazing pressure, but on the 4-8 percent slope even moderate grazing significantly reduced vegetative cover. Light to moderate grazing at the beginning of the dry period enhanced plant biomass productivity, while any grazing reduced plant productivity during the periods of reduced growth. Species richness increased with increasing grazing pressure compared with no grazing, but decreased sharply at very heavy grazing pressure. It is concluded that there is need for developing `slope and time specific' grazing management practices, and to assess short and long term effects of grazing and trampling on vegetation. 1997-06 2013-05-06T06:59:58Z 2013-05-06T06:59:58Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28125 en Limited Access Elsevier Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment;64(1): 43-51
spellingShingle highlands
cattle
grazing
vegetation
botanical composition
biomass
yields
Mwendera, E.J.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Woldu, Z.
Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title_fullStr Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full_unstemmed Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title_short Vegetation response to cattle grazing in the Ethiopian highlands
title_sort vegetation response to cattle grazing in the ethiopian highlands
topic highlands
cattle
grazing
vegetation
botanical composition
biomass
yields
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28125
work_keys_str_mv AT mwenderaej vegetationresponsetocattlegrazingintheethiopianhighlands
AT mohamedsaleemma vegetationresponsetocattlegrazingintheethiopianhighlands
AT wolduz vegetationresponsetocattlegrazingintheethiopianhighlands