Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands

This study aims to explain effects of soil textural class, topography, land use, and land use history on soil greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in the Lake Victoria region. We measured GHG fluxes from intact soil cores collected in Rakai, Uganda, an area characterized by low‐input smallholder (<2 ha) farm...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wanyama, Ibrahim, Rufino, Mariana C., Pelster, David E., Wanyama, George N., Atzberger, Clement, Asten, Piet J.A. van, Verchot, Louis V., Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92025
_version_ 1855529208585912320
author Wanyama, Ibrahim
Rufino, Mariana C.
Pelster, David E.
Wanyama, George N.
Atzberger, Clement
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Verchot, Louis V.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
author_browse Asten, Piet J.A. van
Atzberger, Clement
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Pelster, David E.
Rufino, Mariana C.
Verchot, Louis V.
Wanyama, George N.
Wanyama, Ibrahim
author_facet Wanyama, Ibrahim
Rufino, Mariana C.
Pelster, David E.
Wanyama, George N.
Atzberger, Clement
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Verchot, Louis V.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
author_sort Wanyama, Ibrahim
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study aims to explain effects of soil textural class, topography, land use, and land use history on soil greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in the Lake Victoria region. We measured GHG fluxes from intact soil cores collected in Rakai, Uganda, an area characterized by low‐input smallholder (<2 ha) farming systems, typical for the East African highlands. The soil cores were air dried and rewetted to water holding capacities (WHCs) of 30, 55, and 80%. Soil CO2, CH4, and N2O fluxes were measured for 48 h following rewetting. Cumulative N2O fluxes were highest from soils under perennial crops and the lowest from soils under annual crops (P < 0.001 for all WHC). At WHC of 55% or 80%, the sandy clay loam soils had lower N2O fluxes than the clay soils (P < 0.001 and P = 0.041, respectively). Cumulative soil CO2 fluxes were highest from eucalyptus plantations and lowest from annual crops across multiple WHC (P = 0.014 at 30% WHC and P < 0.001 at both 55 and 80% WHC). Methane fluxes were below detectable limits, a shortcoming for using soil cores from the top soil. This study reveals that land use and soil type have strong effects on GHG fluxes from agricultural land in the study area. Field monitoring of fluxes is needed to confirm whether these findings are consistent with what happens in situ.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace92025
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Wiley
publisherStr Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace920252025-11-12T05:56:39Z Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands Wanyama, Ibrahim Rufino, Mariana C. Pelster, David E. Wanyama, George N. Atzberger, Clement Asten, Piet J.A. van Verchot, Louis V. Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus climate change food security agriculture soil greenhouse gases land use land use change landscape paleontology ecology forestry This study aims to explain effects of soil textural class, topography, land use, and land use history on soil greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes in the Lake Victoria region. We measured GHG fluxes from intact soil cores collected in Rakai, Uganda, an area characterized by low‐input smallholder (<2 ha) farming systems, typical for the East African highlands. The soil cores were air dried and rewetted to water holding capacities (WHCs) of 30, 55, and 80%. Soil CO2, CH4, and N2O fluxes were measured for 48 h following rewetting. Cumulative N2O fluxes were highest from soils under perennial crops and the lowest from soils under annual crops (P < 0.001 for all WHC). At WHC of 55% or 80%, the sandy clay loam soils had lower N2O fluxes than the clay soils (P < 0.001 and P = 0.041, respectively). Cumulative soil CO2 fluxes were highest from eucalyptus plantations and lowest from annual crops across multiple WHC (P = 0.014 at 30% WHC and P < 0.001 at both 55 and 80% WHC). Methane fluxes were below detectable limits, a shortcoming for using soil cores from the top soil. This study reveals that land use and soil type have strong effects on GHG fluxes from agricultural land in the study area. Field monitoring of fluxes is needed to confirm whether these findings are consistent with what happens in situ. 2018-03 2018-04-04T16:20:47Z 2018-04-04T16:20:47Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92025 en Open Access application/pdf Wiley Wanyama, I., Rufino, M.C., Pelster, D.E., Wanyama, G., Atzberger, C., Van Asten, P., Verchot, L.V., Butterbach-Bahl, K. 2018. Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 123 (3): 976-990. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JG003856
spellingShingle climate change
food security
agriculture
soil
greenhouse gases
land use
land use change
landscape
paleontology
ecology
forestry
Wanyama, Ibrahim
Rufino, Mariana C.
Pelster, David E.
Wanyama, George N.
Atzberger, Clement
Asten, Piet J.A. van
Verchot, Louis V.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title_full Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title_fullStr Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title_full_unstemmed Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title_short Land Use, Land Use History, and Soil Type Affect Soil Greenhouse Gas Fluxes From Agricultural Landscapes of the East African Highlands
title_sort land use land use history and soil type affect soil greenhouse gas fluxes from agricultural landscapes of the east african highlands
topic climate change
food security
agriculture
soil
greenhouse gases
land use
land use change
landscape
paleontology
ecology
forestry
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92025
work_keys_str_mv AT wanyamaibrahim landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT rufinomarianac landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT pelsterdavide landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT wanyamageorgen landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT atzbergerclement landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT astenpietjavan landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT verchotlouisv landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands
AT butterbachbahlklaus landuselandusehistoryandsoiltypeaffectsoilgreenhousegasfluxesfromagriculturallandscapesoftheeastafricanhighlands