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    Analysis of persistence soil nutrient statusin abandoned cattle kraals in a semi arid area of Botswana

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    Main Article (679.8Kb)
    Date
    2011-12-04
    Author
    Kizza, Sarah
    Totolo, Otlogetswe
    Perkins, Jeremy
    Areola, Olusegun
    Publisher
    Academic Journals, http://www.academicjournals.org
    Link
    http://www.academicjournals.org/sre/pdf/pdf2010/4Dec/Kizza%20et%20al.pdf
    Rights
    All works published by Academic Journals are under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.
    Type
    Published Article
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    Abstract
    The aim of this study was to analyze the depletion of soil nutrients with time on abandoned kraals in a peri-urban area of Botswana. Active kraals are enriched with nutrients through the accumulation of animal droppings and this study was aimed at assessing how long the impact of this soil nutrient enrichment persists after kraal abandonment. A total of 25 disused kraals, that had been abandoned for periods ranging from 1 to 45 years were sampled. The soil parameters analyzed included particle size distribution (%), bulk density (g/cm3), pore space (%), moisture content (%), pH in water and KCl solution, EC (μS/cm), organic matter (%), CEC (meq/100g), exchangeable Ca++(cmolc/kg), Mg++(cmolc/kg), K+(cmolc/kg), Na+ (cmolc/kg), nitrogen [NH4-N (mg/kg), NO3-N (mg/kg), TKN (%), and Olsen P (mg/kg). Results showed that soil nutrient concentrations on abandoned kraals generally were significantly higher than at the control sites. Soil nutrient concentrations decreased with time as abandoned kraals retrogressed towards their pre-kraal conditions. However, the effects of soil nutrient enrichment from animal wastes persist long after kraal abandonment. For example, soil Olsen P, Ca++ and Mg++ levels in kraal sites that had been abandoned for over 45 years were still significantly higher than in the control sites. In a pastoral system such as is practiced in Botswana where kraal manure is not used as soil amendment, the whole ecosystem suffers as soil nutrients are transferred and concentrated at isolated spots (kraals).
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1016
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    • Research articles (Dept of Environmental Science) [65]

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