Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia

In the northern highlands of Ethiopia, establishment of exclosures to restore degraded communal grazing lands has been practiced for the past three decades. However, empirical data on the effectiveness of exclosures in restoring degraded soils are lacking. We investigated the influence of exclosure...

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Autores principales: Mekuria, Wolde, Aynekulu, Ermias
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34523
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author Mekuria, Wolde
Aynekulu, Ermias
author_browse Aynekulu, Ermias
Mekuria, Wolde
author_facet Mekuria, Wolde
Aynekulu, Ermias
author_sort Mekuria, Wolde
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In the northern highlands of Ethiopia, establishment of exclosures to restore degraded communal grazing lands has been practiced for the past three decades. However, empirical data on the effectiveness of exclosures in restoring degraded soils are lacking. We investigated the influence of exclosure age on degree of restoration of degraded soil and identified easily measurable biophysical and management-related factors that can be used to predict soil nutrient restoration. We selected replicated (n = 3) 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-year-old exclosures and paired each exclosure with samples from adjacent communal grazing lands. All exclosures showed higher total soil nitrogen (N), available phosphorus (P), and cation exchange capacity than the communal grazing lands. The differences varied between 2!4 ("0!61) and 6!9 ("1!85) Mgha#1 for the total N stock and from 17 ("3) to 39 ("7) kg ha#1 for the available P stock. The differences in N and P increased with exclosure age. In exclosures, much of the variability in soil N (R2=0!64) and P (R2=0!71) stocks were explained by a combination of annual average precipitation, woody biomass, and exclosure age. Precipitation and vegetation canopy cover also explained much of the variability in soil N (R2=0!74) and P (R2=0!52) stocks in communal grazing lands. Converting degraded communal grazing lands into exclosures is a viable option to restore degraded soils. Our results also con"rm that the possibility to predict the changes in soil nutrient content after exclosure establishment using regression models is based on "eld measurements.
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spelling CGSpace345232025-07-23T18:05:32Z Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia Mekuria, Wolde Aynekulu, Ermias land management land degradation soil properties soil fertility grazing lands vegetation statistical methods In the northern highlands of Ethiopia, establishment of exclosures to restore degraded communal grazing lands has been practiced for the past three decades. However, empirical data on the effectiveness of exclosures in restoring degraded soils are lacking. We investigated the influence of exclosure age on degree of restoration of degraded soil and identified easily measurable biophysical and management-related factors that can be used to predict soil nutrient restoration. We selected replicated (n = 3) 5-, 10-, 15-, and 20-year-old exclosures and paired each exclosure with samples from adjacent communal grazing lands. All exclosures showed higher total soil nitrogen (N), available phosphorus (P), and cation exchange capacity than the communal grazing lands. The differences varied between 2!4 ("0!61) and 6!9 ("1!85) Mgha#1 for the total N stock and from 17 ("3) to 39 ("7) kg ha#1 for the available P stock. The differences in N and P increased with exclosure age. In exclosures, much of the variability in soil N (R2=0!64) and P (R2=0!71) stocks were explained by a combination of annual average precipitation, woody biomass, and exclosure age. Precipitation and vegetation canopy cover also explained much of the variability in soil N (R2=0!74) and P (R2=0!52) stocks in communal grazing lands. Converting degraded communal grazing lands into exclosures is a viable option to restore degraded soils. Our results also con"rm that the possibility to predict the changes in soil nutrient content after exclosure establishment using regression models is based on "eld measurements. 2013-11 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z 2014-02-02T16:39:50Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34523 en Limited Access Wiley Mekuria, W. & Aynekulu, E. 2011. Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia. Land Degradation and Development (Online first) DOI: 10.1002/ldr.1146.
spellingShingle land management
land degradation
soil properties
soil fertility
grazing lands
vegetation
statistical methods
Mekuria, Wolde
Aynekulu, Ermias
Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title_full Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title_short Exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern Ethiopia
title_sort exclosure land management restores soil properties of degraded communal grazing lands in northern ethiopia
topic land management
land degradation
soil properties
soil fertility
grazing lands
vegetation
statistical methods
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34523
work_keys_str_mv AT mekuriawolde exclosurelandmanagementrestoressoilpropertiesofdegradedcommunalgrazinglandsinnorthernethiopia
AT aynekuluermias exclosurelandmanagementrestoressoilpropertiesofdegradedcommunalgrazinglandsinnorthernethiopia