Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua

Erosion by water is a serious problem threatening the sustainability of steep land agricultural production throughout the tropics. The El Pital watershed is typical of the many regions within Nicaragua where the effects of erosion are increasingly evident. Analysis of aerial photographs taken in 1968 and 1987, and comparing them with conditions in 1996, indicates that erosion has increased throughout this period and is substantially above the expected geologic "natural" erosion rate for the area. This trend is associated with increased fragmentation of farms associated with the agrarian reform activities of the 1980's, during which many of the large land-holdings were confiscated and redistributed to many peasant families. Also the increasing population and inheritance customs have contributed to the proliferation of smaller farming units. Small farming units (< 4 ha) are linked to increased erosion because small farms tend to emphasize production of annual crops necessary to meet the subsistence needs of the farm family. Annual crop production is a land use that has a high erosion risk because the soil is more exposed to raindrop impact and there is less vegetative obstruction to overland flow than if the land use was forest, range, or a perennial crop with high cover characteristics, such as coffee. The trend within the watershed toward increased emphasis on annual crop production is greatest on the steeplands where the erosion risk is naturally high. The increase of small farms on the steepland is a function of political and economic considerations, which make these lands most available for settlement. Most of the institutions working in the watershed to encourage soil conservation have targeted the beneficiaries of agrarian reform. The result has been that adoption of soil conservation practices tends to be greater on these farms than on the lands that were traditionally privately owned. This illustrates that extension activities do make a significant difference in adoption of soil conservation practices. Because the trend within the watershed is toward an increase in small farms, and because the trend on small farms is to select crops with a high erosion risk, there is a need to design and implement programs that enhance adoption of soil conservation technologies by these small farmers.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: 120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A., 18348 Texas A & M University, Texas (EUA). Office of Graduate Studies
Format: biblioteca
Published: Texas (EUA) 1997
Subjects:EROSION, CONSERVACION DE SUELOS, UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA, TENENCIA, CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS, TERRENO EN DECLIVE, SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO, EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA, EL PITAL, NICARAGUA,
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id KOHA-OAI-BVE:108185
record_format koha
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
topic EROSION
CONSERVACION DE SUELOS
UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA
TENENCIA
CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS
TERRENO EN DECLIVE
SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
EL PITAL
NICARAGUA
EROSION
CONSERVACION DE SUELOS
UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA
TENENCIA
CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS
TERRENO EN DECLIVE
SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
EL PITAL
NICARAGUA
spellingShingle EROSION
CONSERVACION DE SUELOS
UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA
TENENCIA
CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS
TERRENO EN DECLIVE
SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
EL PITAL
NICARAGUA
EROSION
CONSERVACION DE SUELOS
UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA
TENENCIA
CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS
TERRENO EN DECLIVE
SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
EL PITAL
NICARAGUA
120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A.
18348 Texas A & M University, Texas (EUA). Office of Graduate Studies
Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
description Erosion by water is a serious problem threatening the sustainability of steep land agricultural production throughout the tropics. The El Pital watershed is typical of the many regions within Nicaragua where the effects of erosion are increasingly evident. Analysis of aerial photographs taken in 1968 and 1987, and comparing them with conditions in 1996, indicates that erosion has increased throughout this period and is substantially above the expected geologic "natural" erosion rate for the area. This trend is associated with increased fragmentation of farms associated with the agrarian reform activities of the 1980's, during which many of the large land-holdings were confiscated and redistributed to many peasant families. Also the increasing population and inheritance customs have contributed to the proliferation of smaller farming units. Small farming units (< 4 ha) are linked to increased erosion because small farms tend to emphasize production of annual crops necessary to meet the subsistence needs of the farm family. Annual crop production is a land use that has a high erosion risk because the soil is more exposed to raindrop impact and there is less vegetative obstruction to overland flow than if the land use was forest, range, or a perennial crop with high cover characteristics, such as coffee. The trend within the watershed toward increased emphasis on annual crop production is greatest on the steeplands where the erosion risk is naturally high. The increase of small farms on the steepland is a function of political and economic considerations, which make these lands most available for settlement. Most of the institutions working in the watershed to encourage soil conservation have targeted the beneficiaries of agrarian reform. The result has been that adoption of soil conservation practices tends to be greater on these farms than on the lands that were traditionally privately owned. This illustrates that extension activities do make a significant difference in adoption of soil conservation practices. Because the trend within the watershed is toward an increase in small farms, and because the trend on small farms is to select crops with a high erosion risk, there is a need to design and implement programs that enhance adoption of soil conservation technologies by these small farmers.
format
topic_facet EROSION
CONSERVACION DE SUELOS
UTILIZACION DE LA TIERRA
TENENCIA
CUENCAS HIDROGRAFICAS
TERRENO EN DECLIVE
SISTEMAS DE CULTIVO
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALA
EL PITAL
NICARAGUA
author 120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A.
18348 Texas A & M University, Texas (EUA). Office of Graduate Studies
author_facet 120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A.
18348 Texas A & M University, Texas (EUA). Office of Graduate Studies
author_sort 120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A.
title Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
title_short Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
title_full Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
title_fullStr Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
title_full_unstemmed Soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua
title_sort soil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, el pital watershed, nicaragua
publisher Texas (EUA)
publishDate 1997
work_keys_str_mv AT 120494somarribachangma soilerosionandconservationasaffectedbylanduseandlandtenureelpitalwatershednicaragua
AT 18348texasamuniversitytexaseuaofficeofgraduatestudies soilerosionandconservationasaffectedbylanduseandlandtenureelpitalwatershednicaragua
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1081852020-02-03T22:20:18ZSoil erosion and conservation as affected by land use and land tenure, El Pital Watershed, Nicaragua 120494 Somarriba Chang, M.A. 18348 Texas A & M University, Texas (EUA). Office of Graduate Studies Texas (EUA)1997Erosion by water is a serious problem threatening the sustainability of steep land agricultural production throughout the tropics. The El Pital watershed is typical of the many regions within Nicaragua where the effects of erosion are increasingly evident. Analysis of aerial photographs taken in 1968 and 1987, and comparing them with conditions in 1996, indicates that erosion has increased throughout this period and is substantially above the expected geologic "natural" erosion rate for the area. This trend is associated with increased fragmentation of farms associated with the agrarian reform activities of the 1980's, during which many of the large land-holdings were confiscated and redistributed to many peasant families. Also the increasing population and inheritance customs have contributed to the proliferation of smaller farming units. Small farming units (< 4 ha) are linked to increased erosion because small farms tend to emphasize production of annual crops necessary to meet the subsistence needs of the farm family. Annual crop production is a land use that has a high erosion risk because the soil is more exposed to raindrop impact and there is less vegetative obstruction to overland flow than if the land use was forest, range, or a perennial crop with high cover characteristics, such as coffee. The trend within the watershed toward increased emphasis on annual crop production is greatest on the steeplands where the erosion risk is naturally high. The increase of small farms on the steepland is a function of political and economic considerations, which make these lands most available for settlement. Most of the institutions working in the watershed to encourage soil conservation have targeted the beneficiaries of agrarian reform. The result has been that adoption of soil conservation practices tends to be greater on these farms than on the lands that were traditionally privately owned. This illustrates that extension activities do make a significant difference in adoption of soil conservation practices. Because the trend within the watershed is toward an increase in small farms, and because the trend on small farms is to select crops with a high erosion risk, there is a need to design and implement programs that enhance adoption of soil conservation technologies by these small farmers.Tesis (Master of Science)Erosion by water is a serious problem threatening the sustainability of steep land agricultural production throughout the tropics. The El Pital watershed is typical of the many regions within Nicaragua where the effects of erosion are increasingly evident. Analysis of aerial photographs taken in 1968 and 1987, and comparing them with conditions in 1996, indicates that erosion has increased throughout this period and is substantially above the expected geologic "natural" erosion rate for the area. This trend is associated with increased fragmentation of farms associated with the agrarian reform activities of the 1980's, during which many of the large land-holdings were confiscated and redistributed to many peasant families. Also the increasing population and inheritance customs have contributed to the proliferation of smaller farming units. Small farming units (< 4 ha) are linked to increased erosion because small farms tend to emphasize production of annual crops necessary to meet the subsistence needs of the farm family. Annual crop production is a land use that has a high erosion risk because the soil is more exposed to raindrop impact and there is less vegetative obstruction to overland flow than if the land use was forest, range, or a perennial crop with high cover characteristics, such as coffee. The trend within the watershed toward increased emphasis on annual crop production is greatest on the steeplands where the erosion risk is naturally high. The increase of small farms on the steepland is a function of political and economic considerations, which make these lands most available for settlement. Most of the institutions working in the watershed to encourage soil conservation have targeted the beneficiaries of agrarian reform. The result has been that adoption of soil conservation practices tends to be greater on these farms than on the lands that were traditionally privately owned. This illustrates that extension activities do make a significant difference in adoption of soil conservation practices. Because the trend within the watershed is toward an increase in small farms, and because the trend on small farms is to select crops with a high erosion risk, there is a need to design and implement programs that enhance adoption of soil conservation technologies by these small farmers.EROSIONCONSERVACION DE SUELOSUTILIZACION DE LA TIERRATENENCIACUENCAS HIDROGRAFICASTERRENO EN DECLIVESISTEMAS DE CULTIVOEXPLOTACION EN PEQUEÑA ESCALAEL PITALNICARAGUA