Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services

The Blue Nile Basin (Abay in Ethiopia) covers wide range landscapes and climatic zones in Ethiopia and Sudan. Different agricultural production systems, in the basin, evolved in response to those diverse landscapes and climatic zones, and the attendant human decision dynamics that responds to changi...

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Autores principales: Haileslassie, Amare, Hagos, Fitsum, Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele, Peden, Donald G., Gebreselassie, S., Negash, F.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38113
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author Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Gebreselassie, S.
Negash, F.
author_browse Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Gebreselassie, S.
Hagos, Fitsum
Haileslassie, Amare
Negash, F.
Peden, Donald G.
author_facet Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Gebreselassie, S.
Negash, F.
author_sort Haileslassie, Amare
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Blue Nile Basin (Abay in Ethiopia) covers wide range landscapes and climatic zones in Ethiopia and Sudan. Different agricultural production systems, in the basin, evolved in response to those diverse landscapes and climatic zones, and the attendant human decision dynamics that responds to changing livelihood opportunities. Many production systems studies recognized only mixed agriculture in the highlands and pastoralism in the lowland areas. Now it is widely recognized that several other factors such as land-use, vegetation cover, and different land and water management practices are important in defining production systems. These study approaches help to capture the diverse water and land related livelihoods of the farming communities in upstream and downstream parts of the basin and their impact on their respective environments. In this review, we follow a similar approach but focus at the basin scale to define and characterize major production systems and associated subsystems specifically: small grain cereals-based mixed crop-livestock and maize-sorghum-perennials systems and their associated subsystems. We then focus on water management practices in rainfed and irrigated systems. We also synthesized impacts of those production systems on the environment and upstream-downstream linkage using erosion, sedimentation, livestock and crop water productivity, soil nutrient balances as indicators. Evidences suggest that natural ecosystem services (e.g. regulation services such as nutrient recycling and redistribution) are severely threatened in the Blue Nile basin. On-site and off-site effects of pedogenic processes like sediment removal, transportation, redistribution and attendant environmental impacts (e.g. nutrient balances and water productivity) are highly correlated with dominant farming practices and attendant anthropogenic interventions. Indicators such as water productivity and soil nutrient depletion and farmers? activities to replenish the lost nutrients are also strongly related to the degree of the farmers? resource endowments. In view of initiating the upstream community to invest more on land and water management, options for payment for environmental services (PES) must be sought and, interventions that enhance sustainable ecosystem management must use integrated approaches and farming system/subsystems as entry point.
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spelling CGSpace381132025-11-07T08:36:05Z Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services Haileslassie, Amare Hagos, Fitsum Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele Peden, Donald G. Gebreselassie, S. Negash, F. environmental degradation erosion sedimentation water productivity farming systems mixed cropping cereals maize sorghum barley wheat irrigated farming rainfed farming livestock pastoralism farmers attitudes poverty The Blue Nile Basin (Abay in Ethiopia) covers wide range landscapes and climatic zones in Ethiopia and Sudan. Different agricultural production systems, in the basin, evolved in response to those diverse landscapes and climatic zones, and the attendant human decision dynamics that responds to changing livelihood opportunities. Many production systems studies recognized only mixed agriculture in the highlands and pastoralism in the lowland areas. Now it is widely recognized that several other factors such as land-use, vegetation cover, and different land and water management practices are important in defining production systems. These study approaches help to capture the diverse water and land related livelihoods of the farming communities in upstream and downstream parts of the basin and their impact on their respective environments. In this review, we follow a similar approach but focus at the basin scale to define and characterize major production systems and associated subsystems specifically: small grain cereals-based mixed crop-livestock and maize-sorghum-perennials systems and their associated subsystems. We then focus on water management practices in rainfed and irrigated systems. We also synthesized impacts of those production systems on the environment and upstream-downstream linkage using erosion, sedimentation, livestock and crop water productivity, soil nutrient balances as indicators. Evidences suggest that natural ecosystem services (e.g. regulation services such as nutrient recycling and redistribution) are severely threatened in the Blue Nile basin. On-site and off-site effects of pedogenic processes like sediment removal, transportation, redistribution and attendant environmental impacts (e.g. nutrient balances and water productivity) are highly correlated with dominant farming practices and attendant anthropogenic interventions. Indicators such as water productivity and soil nutrient depletion and farmers? activities to replenish the lost nutrients are also strongly related to the degree of the farmers? resource endowments. In view of initiating the upstream community to invest more on land and water management, options for payment for environmental services (PES) must be sought and, interventions that enhance sustainable ecosystem management must use integrated approaches and farming system/subsystems as entry point. 2008 2014-06-13T11:40:45Z 2014-06-13T11:40:45Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38113 en Open Access application/pdf Haileslassie, A.; Hagos, Fitsum; Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele; Peden, D.; Gebreselassie, S.; Negash, F. 2008. Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services. Paper presented at the Second Nile Development Forum, Khartoum, Sudan, 17-19 November 2008. 37p.
spellingShingle environmental degradation
erosion
sedimentation
water productivity
farming systems
mixed cropping
cereals
maize
sorghum
barley
wheat
irrigated farming
rainfed farming
livestock
pastoralism
farmers attitudes
poverty
Haileslassie, Amare
Hagos, Fitsum
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Peden, Donald G.
Gebreselassie, S.
Negash, F.
Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title_full Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title_fullStr Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title_full_unstemmed Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title_short Indicators of environmental degradation in the Blue Nile Basin: exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
title_sort indicators of environmental degradation in the blue nile basin exploring prospects for payment for environmental services
topic environmental degradation
erosion
sedimentation
water productivity
farming systems
mixed cropping
cereals
maize
sorghum
barley
wheat
irrigated farming
rainfed farming
livestock
pastoralism
farmers attitudes
poverty
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/38113
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