4 results on '"SOIL-EROSION"'
Search Results
2. A Political Ecology Perspective of Land Degradation in the North Ethiopian Highlands
- Author
-
Mitiku Haile, Ben Derudder, Sil Lanckriet, J Naudts, Jan Nyssen, Jozef Deckers, Hans Bauer, Escadafal, Richard, Marques, Maria Jose, Stringer, Lindsay, and Akhtar-Schuster, Mariam
- Subjects
AFRICA ,WATER CONSERVATION ,Soil Science ,land policy ,Development ,Water conservation ,Environmental protection ,Overpopulation ,land tenancy ,Environmental Chemistry ,DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES ,Land tenure ,Environmental degradation ,ASSOCIATIONS ,General Environmental Science ,SOIL-EROSION ,Land use ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,land degradation ,POLICY ,Political ecology ,semi structured interview ,PLATEAU ,Geography ,SCALE ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION ,Earth and Environmental Sciences ,TIGRAY ,SEA-SURFACE TEMPERATURE ,Land degradation ,Land development ,business - Abstract
Severe environmental degradation in the north Ethiopian Highlands is among others the result of mismanagement, overpopulation and droughts. However, here, we investigate the linkages of land degradation with the historical dynamics of the political–ecological system and regional land policies. We performed semi-structured interviews with 93 farmers in eight villages in the Tigray region (north Ethiopia) and conceptualised a political–ecological model of land tenure and degradation changes for the region. Results show that different land policies caused and still cause land degradation in several ways. Interviews reveal that the unequal character of land rights during feudal times played an important role in 19th and 20th century land degradation. In particular, poor farmers were forced to construct their farms on marginal terrains, such as steep slopes in dry areas and marshes in cold and humid areas, increasing the catchment water runoff and degradation. The interviews further suggest that after the Derg regime (1974–1991), environmental conservation strategies were successfully implemented at larger scales. Overall, feudal, Derg and contemporary land policies have all had impacts on environmental degradation and have left their fingerprints on the physical landscape of northern Ethiopia. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2014
3. Catchment Rehabilitation and Hydro‐geomorphic Characteristics of Mountain Streams in the Western Rift Valley Escarpment of Northern Ethiopia
- Author
-
Amaury Frankl, Jan Nyssen, Mitiku Haile, and Tesfaalem Ghebreyohannes Asfaha
- Subjects
land use change ,scar density ,soil and water conservation ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,NDVI ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Drainage basin ,Soil Science ,02 engineering and technology ,STREAMS ,Escarpment ,Development ,01 natural sciences ,Normalized Difference Vegetation Index ,CONNECTIVITY ,stream incision ,Environmental Chemistry ,northern Ethiopia ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Hydrology ,geography ,SOIL-EROSION ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,DESERTIFICATION ,TIGRAY HIGHLANDS ,stream adjustment ,LAND-USE CHANGE ,COVER ,incision ,CHANNEL MORPHOLOGY ,020801 environmental engineering ,VARIABILITY ,ADJUSTMENTS ,Desertification ,Earth and Environmental Sciences ,VEGETATION ,Soil conservation ,Surface runoff ,Rift valley ,Geology - Abstract
The catchments in the western Rift Valley escarpment of northern Ethiopia are highly responsive in terms of hydro-geomorphic changes. With deforestation, dense gully and scar networks had developed by the 1980s on the escarpment between the towns of Alamata and Korem, transporting huge amounts of runoff and sediment down to the fertile and densely populated Raya Valley. To reverse this problem, catchment-scale rehabilitation activities were initiated in the mid-1980s. In this study, we examine the major hydro-geomorphic response of streams after catchment rehabilitation. Scar networks in 20 adjacent catchments were mapped on Google Earth imagery of 2005, and their density was explained in terms of its corresponding Normalized Difference Vegetation Index and slope gradient. Soil and water conservation measures and vegetation recovery have reduced discharge and sediment flow which in turn resulted in various hydro-geomorphic changes. In a multiple regression analysis, scar density was negatively related with Normalized Difference Vegetation Index and positively with average gradient of very steep slopes (r2 = 0·53, p
- Published
- 2014
4. The anthropogenic influence on wildfire regimes: charcoal records from the Holocene and Last Interglacial at Ioannina, Greece
- Author
-
Katherine H Roucoux, Ian T. Lawson, Nena Galanidou, Polychronis C Tzedakis, University of St Andrews. Geography & Sustainable Development, and University of St Andrews. Bell-Edwards Geographic Data Institute
- Subjects
Mediterranean climate ,History ,Climate ,Microcharcoal ,Mediterranean ,Black carbon ,SDG 13 - Climate Action ,Flandrian interglacial ,North-West Greece ,Forest ,Glacial period ,Climate-change ,Charcoal ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Holocene ,Pollen analysis ,Vegetation ,GE ,Ecology ,Fire regime ,Soil-erosion ,Palaeoecology ,Sediment ,Human impact ,Fire activity ,Fire ,Lake sediments ,Pleistocene ,visual_art ,Interglacial ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Environmental science ,Physical geography ,Glacial cycles ,Biomass burning ,GE Environmental Sciences - Abstract
Aim To characterize the changing fire regime of a Mediterranean landscape during the Holocene and the Last Interglacial and, by comparing the two periods, to improve our understanding of the extent and timing of human alteration of natural fire regimes. Location Lake Ioannina, north-western Greece (39°45′ N, 20°51′ E). Methods Using a long sequence of lake sediments, we measured the charcoal content of the sediment over the course of the Holocene and the Last Interglacial. We compared the charcoal data with pollen data for the same periods. Results Charcoal was present in all samples analysed. Charcoal influx was greater during interglacials, which at Ioannina were forested, than during glacials, when tree populations were small. Charcoal influx was greater and more variable during the Holocene than during the Last Interglacial. Main conclusions Fire was a persistent feature throughout the periods studied, under both glacial and interglacial conditions. Overall, more biomass was burned during interglacials than during glacials, and peak burning occurred at intermediate values of moisture availability. There is little evidence that the composition of forests significantly affected burning regimes. Enhanced burning during the Holocene relative to the Last Interglacial may reflect human impact, as well as climatic or vegetational differences between the two periods.
- Published
- 2013
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.