Title of article
Effects of grazing intensity and prescribed fire on soil physical and hydrological properties and pasture yield in the savanna woodlands of Burkina Faso
Author/Authors
Patrice Savadogo، نويسنده , , Louis Sawadogo، نويسنده , , Daniel Tiveau، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
80
To page
92
Abstract
In West Africa policies for prescribed early fire and livestock grazing in the savanna woodlands are rarely based on long-term experimental studies. The inherently different management characteristics and their effects on the vegetation dynamics make landscape degradation a contentious issue. The effects of grazing intensity were investigated by a comparison of non-grazed areas, lightly grazed areas, moderately grazed areas, heavily grazed areas and very heavily grazed areas that received one of two fire treatments: early burning and fire protection in a long-term 12-year study. The parameters assessed reflected changes in herbaceous plant cover, biomass as well as soil physical and hydrological properties. The main findings were by and large specific for the grazing level. This supports the argument for devolution of management responsibility to the local level where there is indigenous site-specific knowledge but at the same time insufficient management capacity.
Keywords
Trampling , Vegetation cover , Soil compaction , Net primary production , Infiltration
Journal title
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
Record number
1283207
Link To Document