Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya

The soils ability to produce food is important in all parts of the world. The soils used for food production in Kenya are threatened by different factors, such as soil degradation due to erosion, lack of nutrients, and scarcity of water. The aim of the study was: (1) to obtain background information...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Rosén, Sara
Formato: M2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Soil and Environment 2009
Materias:
_version_ 1855570493277470720
author Rosén, Sara
author_browse Rosén, Sara
author_facet Rosén, Sara
author_sort Rosén, Sara
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The soils ability to produce food is important in all parts of the world. The soils used for food production in Kenya are threatened by different factors, such as soil degradation due to erosion, lack of nutrients, and scarcity of water. The aim of the study was: (1) to obtain background information related to Kenyan small hold farming, focusing on the farmer’s experience of productivity and erosion, and (2) to measure soil physical properties and field characteristics as part of a field study conducted over a short period of time. This study was conducted on eight farms in the Embu district, in central Kenya. The study was divided into three parts: study of farming in the Embu district, study of soil physical properties and their correlation to productivity, and a study of soil erosion. The first study was done through observation and interview. It showed that farming was done with simple methods. The most common crops were: maize, beans, bananas, coffee and tea. The farms were small, around one hectare with small fields of about 1300 m2. The following soil physical properties were compared between fields with high and low productivity, respectively, within the farms: soil texture, plant available water capacity and infiltration capacity. The carbon content was also compared. There were no statistically significant differences in the mentioned physical properties and carbon content between the high/low producing fields. The reasons for this might be that: farms are small and the soil physical properties homogenous, yield data was too uncertain or other soil properties affect the productivity. The texture was rich in clay and the plant available water had an average of 21% of the soil, which is ideal for maximal root growth and function. The average carbon content for the area was 2.0%, which is good for African soil and the average infiltration capacity was 330 mm/h, which is rapid. This showed that infiltration and plant available water was not limiting for the crops. The erosion study compared sites on the farms which had much and little erosion, respectively. The compared factors were: silt content, slope steepness and infiltration capacity. There were no statistical significant differences in the mentioned factors between the sites with much and little erosion. The average soil loss for the region was calculated to 80 ton ha-1 year-1 using the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE).
format M2
id RepoSLU2862
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2009
publishDateSort 2009
publisher SLU/Dept. of Soil and Environment
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Soil and Environment
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU28622012-10-06T15:51:59Z Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya Rosén, Sara erosion Kenya soil physical properties The soils ability to produce food is important in all parts of the world. The soils used for food production in Kenya are threatened by different factors, such as soil degradation due to erosion, lack of nutrients, and scarcity of water. The aim of the study was: (1) to obtain background information related to Kenyan small hold farming, focusing on the farmer’s experience of productivity and erosion, and (2) to measure soil physical properties and field characteristics as part of a field study conducted over a short period of time. This study was conducted on eight farms in the Embu district, in central Kenya. The study was divided into three parts: study of farming in the Embu district, study of soil physical properties and their correlation to productivity, and a study of soil erosion. The first study was done through observation and interview. It showed that farming was done with simple methods. The most common crops were: maize, beans, bananas, coffee and tea. The farms were small, around one hectare with small fields of about 1300 m2. The following soil physical properties were compared between fields with high and low productivity, respectively, within the farms: soil texture, plant available water capacity and infiltration capacity. The carbon content was also compared. There were no statistically significant differences in the mentioned physical properties and carbon content between the high/low producing fields. The reasons for this might be that: farms are small and the soil physical properties homogenous, yield data was too uncertain or other soil properties affect the productivity. The texture was rich in clay and the plant available water had an average of 21% of the soil, which is ideal for maximal root growth and function. The average carbon content for the area was 2.0%, which is good for African soil and the average infiltration capacity was 330 mm/h, which is rapid. This showed that infiltration and plant available water was not limiting for the crops. The erosion study compared sites on the farms which had much and little erosion, respectively. The compared factors were: silt content, slope steepness and infiltration capacity. There were no statistical significant differences in the mentioned factors between the sites with much and little erosion. The average soil loss for the region was calculated to 80 ton ha-1 year-1 using the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE). SLU/Dept. of Soil and Environment 2009 M2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2862/
spellingShingle erosion
Kenya
soil physical properties
Rosén, Sara
Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title_full Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title_fullStr Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title_short Soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in Embu, Kenya
title_sort soil physical properties and erosion risks at smallholder farms in embu, kenya
topic erosion
Kenya
soil physical properties