Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon

A study was conducted to assess the impact of agricultural land use history on macro-aggregate (4.0–4.8 mm) stability in the 0–5 cm layers of Chromic and ‘Hydromorphic’ Vertisols in north Cameroon. Macroaggregate stability to water drop impact was determined and the ASI50 index calculated. Macroaggr...

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Autores principales: Obale‐Ebanga, F., Sevink, J., Groot, W. de, Nolte, C.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96367
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author Obale‐Ebanga, F.
Sevink, J.
Groot, W. de
Nolte, C.
author_browse Groot, W. de
Nolte, C.
Obale‐Ebanga, F.
Sevink, J.
author_facet Obale‐Ebanga, F.
Sevink, J.
Groot, W. de
Nolte, C.
author_sort Obale‐Ebanga, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A study was conducted to assess the impact of agricultural land use history on macro-aggregate (4.0–4.8 mm) stability in the 0–5 cm layers of Chromic and ‘Hydromorphic’ Vertisols in north Cameroon. Macroaggregate stability to water drop impact was determined and the ASI50 index calculated. Macroaggregates from fallow and zero-tilled cropped soils disaggregated in a stepwise manner. Macroaggregates from ploughed cropped soils collapsed in one step into semi-liquefied microaggregates and primary particles. On both soil types, the ASI50 index of samples from ploughed land was 10.0 mJ, compared to 16.4– 21.9 mJ from zero-tilled slash and burn land use. The stepwise disintegration of macroaggregates indicated the existence of a hierarchy of aggregation within the size range 2–5 mm. Slash and burn land use on zero-tilled Vertisols significantly increased sand-sized organic carbon content and the stability of macroaggregates to water impact.
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spelling CGSpace963672024-05-15T05:12:21Z Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon Obale‐Ebanga, F. Sevink, J. Groot, W. de Nolte, C. vertisols aggregate stability land use shifting cultivation A study was conducted to assess the impact of agricultural land use history on macro-aggregate (4.0–4.8 mm) stability in the 0–5 cm layers of Chromic and ‘Hydromorphic’ Vertisols in north Cameroon. Macroaggregate stability to water drop impact was determined and the ASI50 index calculated. Macroaggregates from fallow and zero-tilled cropped soils disaggregated in a stepwise manner. Macroaggregates from ploughed cropped soils collapsed in one step into semi-liquefied microaggregates and primary particles. On both soil types, the ASI50 index of samples from ploughed land was 10.0 mJ, compared to 16.4– 21.9 mJ from zero-tilled slash and burn land use. The stepwise disintegration of macroaggregates indicated the existence of a hierarchy of aggregation within the size range 2–5 mm. Slash and burn land use on zero-tilled Vertisols significantly increased sand-sized organic carbon content and the stability of macroaggregates to water impact. 2003-03 2018-08-09T06:40:33Z 2018-08-09T06:40:33Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96367 en Limited Access Wiley Obale‐Ebanga, F., Sevink, J., de Groot, W. & Nolte, C. (2003). Myths of slash and burn on physical degradation of savannah soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon. Soil Use and Management, 19(1), 83-86.
spellingShingle vertisols
aggregate
stability
land use
shifting cultivation
Obale‐Ebanga, F.
Sevink, J.
Groot, W. de
Nolte, C.
Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title_full Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title_fullStr Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title_short Myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils: impacts on Vertisols in north Cameroon
title_sort myths about slash and burn in physical degradation of savanna soils impacts on vertisols in north cameroon
topic vertisols
aggregate
stability
land use
shifting cultivation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96367
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