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The influence of different land-use practices on soil erosion, herbage production and on grass species richness and diversity.


Venter J.
Liggett B.
Tainton N.M.
Clarke G.P.Y.
Liggitt B.

Abstract

A fence-line contrast study compared erosion levels, herbage production and grass species diversity in Umfolozi Game Reserve (UGR) and adjacent Kwazulu (KWZ). There was no significant difference in soil loss or A-horizon depths measured in KWZ and UGR, but there were significant differences in both parameters when measurements from upper, mid and lower slope sites were compared. Similarly, there was no significant difference between herbage accumulated in KWZ and UGR in the absence of grazing, but there was a significant difference between the upper, mid and lower slope plots. There was also no significant difference between grass species richness was compared between upper, mid and lower slopes. The major conclusion drawn from these results was that differences in the topographical position of the plots, rather than differences in land-use practices, explained the greater amount of variability in the data.Language: English

Keywords: catena; erosion; fence-line contrast; Grass species; grasses; grazing; herbaceous biomass; herbage production; kwazulu; land-use practices; soil erosion; soil loss; south africa; species diversity; species richness; umfolozi game reserve


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1727-9380
print ISSN: 1022-0119