Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis

Land degradation, low agricultural productivity and poverty are major problems in Ethiopia. The existing resources cannot support the growing human and livestock population. Currently, there is an increasing interest among researchers and development experts in leguminous multipurpose trees and shru...

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Autores principales: Berhe, Kahsay, Conchedda, Giulia, Jabbar, M.A.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28511
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author Berhe, Kahsay
Conchedda, Giulia
Jabbar, M.A.
author_browse Berhe, Kahsay
Conchedda, Giulia
Jabbar, M.A.
author_facet Berhe, Kahsay
Conchedda, Giulia
Jabbar, M.A.
author_sort Berhe, Kahsay
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Land degradation, low agricultural productivity and poverty are major problems in Ethiopia. The existing resources cannot support the growing human and livestock population. Currently, there is an increasing interest among researchers and development experts in leguminous multipurpose trees and shrubs because these species can address some of these problems. They can be used as a source of supplementary feed and forage for ruminant and non ruminant livestock, green manure, mulch, soil conservation, bee forage, fuel wood, implement and others. The objective of this paper is to define areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs (Calliandra calothyrsus, Sesbania sesban, Leucaena diversifolia, L. pallida and Chamaecytisus palmensis) that were evaluated and found to be promising in some parts of Ethiopia, to other parts of the country, using GIS as a tool. The digital data showed that a large part in the west and south western regions are suitable for C. calothyrsus. Most areas suitable for S. sesban and C. calothyrsus appear to overlaL. pallida was found to be suitable to many parts in the country due to its relatively better drought tolerance. L. diversifolia, on the other hand, could be adapted to only a small area in the country. Large areas of the country extending from north to south and to some highland areas in the east are suitable for C. palmensis. Socioeconomic characteristics are, however, needed before recommending these leguminous trees and shrubs into a farming system
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spelling CGSpace285112024-03-06T10:16:43Z Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis Berhe, Kahsay Conchedda, Giulia Jabbar, M.A. browse plants legumes trees shrubs adaptability soil climate calliandra calothyrsus leucaena diversifolia chamaecytisus palmensis leucaena pallida sesbania sesban Land degradation, low agricultural productivity and poverty are major problems in Ethiopia. The existing resources cannot support the growing human and livestock population. Currently, there is an increasing interest among researchers and development experts in leguminous multipurpose trees and shrubs because these species can address some of these problems. They can be used as a source of supplementary feed and forage for ruminant and non ruminant livestock, green manure, mulch, soil conservation, bee forage, fuel wood, implement and others. The objective of this paper is to define areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs (Calliandra calothyrsus, Sesbania sesban, Leucaena diversifolia, L. pallida and Chamaecytisus palmensis) that were evaluated and found to be promising in some parts of Ethiopia, to other parts of the country, using GIS as a tool. The digital data showed that a large part in the west and south western regions are suitable for C. calothyrsus. Most areas suitable for S. sesban and C. calothyrsus appear to overlaL. pallida was found to be suitable to many parts in the country due to its relatively better drought tolerance. L. diversifolia, on the other hand, could be adapted to only a small area in the country. Large areas of the country extending from north to south and to some highland areas in the east are suitable for C. palmensis. Socioeconomic characteristics are, however, needed before recommending these leguminous trees and shrubs into a farming system 2001 2013-05-06T07:00:45Z 2013-05-06T07:00:45Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28511 en Limited Access Ethiopian Journal of Natural Resources;3(1): 77-97
spellingShingle browse plants
legumes
trees
shrubs
adaptability
soil
climate
calliandra calothyrsus
leucaena diversifolia
chamaecytisus palmensis
leucaena pallida
sesbania sesban
Berhe, Kahsay
Conchedda, Giulia
Jabbar, M.A.
Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title_full Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title_fullStr Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title_full_unstemmed Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title_short Areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in Ethiopia: A digital data-based analysis
title_sort areas suitable for five leguminous trees and shrubs in ethiopia a digital data based analysis
topic browse plants
legumes
trees
shrubs
adaptability
soil
climate
calliandra calothyrsus
leucaena diversifolia
chamaecytisus palmensis
leucaena pallida
sesbania sesban
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28511
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