Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands

Extending livestock grazing to the steep slopes has led to unstable grazing systems in the East African Highlands, and new solutions and approaches are needed to ameliorate the current situation. This work was aimed at studying the effect of livestock grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties. The study was conducted from 1996 to 2000 at the International Livestock Research Institute at Debre Ziet Research Station. Two sites were selected: one at 0-4% slope, and the other at 4-8% slope. The treatments were: (1) no grazing (control); (2) light grazing, 0.6 animal unit months per hectare (aum/ha); (3) moderate grazing, 1.8 aum/ha; (4) heavy grazing, 3.0 aum/ha; (5) very heavy grazing, 4.2 aum/ha; (6) initially plowed and continuously very heavily grazed, 4.2 aum/ha. The result showed that species richness, infiltration rate, bare ground, and soil loss significantly varied with grazing pressure. Species richness was higher in grazed plots compared to nongrazed plots. Biomass yield improved on heavily grazed plots as cow dung accumulated over years. Cynodon dactylon plant species persisted with livestock grazing pressure in both sites. Infiltration rate improved and soil erosion declined in all treatments after the first year.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taddese, G., Mohamed-Saleem, M.A., Astatke, A., Ayaleneh, W.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2002-09
Subjects:grazing, highlands, hydrology, plants, water quality, domestic animals, natural resources, resource conservation, environment, population dynamics, soil water movement, farmyard manure,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32894
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-2727-2
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-328942023-12-08T19:36:04Z Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands Taddese, G. Mohamed-Saleem, M.A. Astatke, A. Ayaleneh, W. grazing highlands hydrology plants water quality domestic animals natural resources resource conservation environment population dynamics soil water movement farmyard manure Extending livestock grazing to the steep slopes has led to unstable grazing systems in the East African Highlands, and new solutions and approaches are needed to ameliorate the current situation. This work was aimed at studying the effect of livestock grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties. The study was conducted from 1996 to 2000 at the International Livestock Research Institute at Debre Ziet Research Station. Two sites were selected: one at 0-4% slope, and the other at 4-8% slope. The treatments were: (1) no grazing (control); (2) light grazing, 0.6 animal unit months per hectare (aum/ha); (3) moderate grazing, 1.8 aum/ha; (4) heavy grazing, 3.0 aum/ha; (5) very heavy grazing, 4.2 aum/ha; (6) initially plowed and continuously very heavily grazed, 4.2 aum/ha. The result showed that species richness, infiltration rate, bare ground, and soil loss significantly varied with grazing pressure. Species richness was higher in grazed plots compared to nongrazed plots. Biomass yield improved on heavily grazed plots as cow dung accumulated over years. Cynodon dactylon plant species persisted with livestock grazing pressure in both sites. Infiltration rate improved and soil erosion declined in all treatments after the first year. 2002-09 2013-07-03T05:25:43Z 2013-07-03T05:25:43Z Journal Article Environmental Management;30(3): 406-417 0364-152X https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32894 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-2727-2 en Copyrighted; all rights reserved Open Access p. 406-417 Springer Environmental Management
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic grazing
highlands
hydrology
plants
water quality
domestic animals
natural resources
resource conservation
environment
population dynamics
soil water movement
farmyard manure
grazing
highlands
hydrology
plants
water quality
domestic animals
natural resources
resource conservation
environment
population dynamics
soil water movement
farmyard manure
spellingShingle grazing
highlands
hydrology
plants
water quality
domestic animals
natural resources
resource conservation
environment
population dynamics
soil water movement
farmyard manure
grazing
highlands
hydrology
plants
water quality
domestic animals
natural resources
resource conservation
environment
population dynamics
soil water movement
farmyard manure
Taddese, G.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Astatke, A.
Ayaleneh, W.
Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
description Extending livestock grazing to the steep slopes has led to unstable grazing systems in the East African Highlands, and new solutions and approaches are needed to ameliorate the current situation. This work was aimed at studying the effect of livestock grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties. The study was conducted from 1996 to 2000 at the International Livestock Research Institute at Debre Ziet Research Station. Two sites were selected: one at 0-4% slope, and the other at 4-8% slope. The treatments were: (1) no grazing (control); (2) light grazing, 0.6 animal unit months per hectare (aum/ha); (3) moderate grazing, 1.8 aum/ha; (4) heavy grazing, 3.0 aum/ha; (5) very heavy grazing, 4.2 aum/ha; (6) initially plowed and continuously very heavily grazed, 4.2 aum/ha. The result showed that species richness, infiltration rate, bare ground, and soil loss significantly varied with grazing pressure. Species richness was higher in grazed plots compared to nongrazed plots. Biomass yield improved on heavily grazed plots as cow dung accumulated over years. Cynodon dactylon plant species persisted with livestock grazing pressure in both sites. Infiltration rate improved and soil erosion declined in all treatments after the first year.
format Journal Article
topic_facet grazing
highlands
hydrology
plants
water quality
domestic animals
natural resources
resource conservation
environment
population dynamics
soil water movement
farmyard manure
author Taddese, G.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Astatke, A.
Ayaleneh, W.
author_facet Taddese, G.
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Astatke, A.
Ayaleneh, W.
author_sort Taddese, G.
title Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
title_short Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
title_full Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
title_fullStr Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
title_full_unstemmed Effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the East African highlands
title_sort effect of grazing on plant attributes and hydrological properties in the sloping lands of the east african highlands
publisher Springer
publishDate 2002-09
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/32894
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-002-2727-2
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