Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Land-use intensity affects range condition in arid to semi-arid Namibia
Author
Zeidler, J
Hanrahan, S
Scholes, M
Publisher
Journal of Arid Environments
Publication Year
2002
Body

Range condition at sites of differing land-use intensity at a communal farm was assessed. Vegetation, soil and termite parameters were tested for their potential as indicators. The vegetation indicators did not discriminate between two sites of high and low land-use intensity. However, the soil fertility parameters provided interesting results. The phosphorus (P), nitrogen (N), organic carbon (OC), light fraction (LF), C:N and C:LF data indicate that nitrogen limitation is more critical under high land-use and grazing pressure. Organic carbon levels are generally low but reduced to critical levels under high land-use intensity; nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen are conserved in the system, whereas organic carbon losses are high and inputs low. The conversion of the [`]active carbon pool' into the [`]slow pool', a prerequisite for long-term soil resilience, is not taking place under high land-use intensity. Termites might play an important role in maintaining range condition.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
52
Journal Number
3
Journal Pages
389-403
Journal Name
Journal of Arid Environments
Keywords
desertification
land degradation
range condition assessment
indicators
soil fertility
Termites
biodiversity
land-use intensity
land use
degradation
rangeland condition
communal farming
Soil Condition
Africa