Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia

Soil degradation is a serious problem challenging food security in Ethiopia. To halt degradation and restore impoverished soils, the government has initiated soil management practices in the affected areas. Still, there is little information on the impact of these practices in terms of improvement i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Damte Balcha Gadana, Parshotam Datt Sharma, Dereje Tsegaye Selfeko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-01-01
Series:Advances in Agriculture
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8866230
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832566653622157312
author Damte Balcha Gadana
Parshotam Datt Sharma
Dereje Tsegaye Selfeko
author_facet Damte Balcha Gadana
Parshotam Datt Sharma
Dereje Tsegaye Selfeko
author_sort Damte Balcha Gadana
collection DOAJ
description Soil degradation is a serious problem challenging food security in Ethiopia. To halt degradation and restore impoverished soils, the government has initiated soil management practices in the affected areas. Still, there is little information on the impact of these practices in terms of improvement in soil fertility of cultivated lands under different soil and climatic conditions. Accordingly, the study was carried out to study the effect of soil management practices, viz, soil bund (SB), application of farm yard manure (FYM), soil bund integrated with FYM (SBFYM), and vis-a-vis no management practice (NM), on soil fertility under upper (20%–30%) and lower (2%–10%) slope ranges at Mawula watershed, Loma district, Southern Ethiopia. Twenty-four composite soil samples (4 practices × 2 slope ranges × 3 sites) drawn from the surface layer (0–20 cm) were analysed for different physical and chemical properties indicative of soil fertility. The data were analysed statistically in a randomized complete block design. All the soil management practices improved significantly the different aspects of physical and chemical fertility (soil texture, bulk density, total porosity, moisture content, organic carbon, and contents of macro and micronutrients, viz, N, P, K, Na, Ca, Mg, Fe, Mn, Zn, and Cu). The practice SBFYM was significantly superior to FYM and SB. The order of performance was SBFYM > FYM > SB > NM. The usefulness of soil management practices was further corroborated by the farmers’ response (based on semistructured questionnaires), as 83% of them perceived the practices well and opted for their adoption. As such, the soil management practices, notably SBFYM, merit their implementation on a large scale to improve fertility and productivity of degraded lands.
format Article
id doaj-art-f44420db63724ad995461c4ad594b8d8
institution Kabale University
issn 2356-654X
2314-7539
language English
publishDate 2020-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Advances in Agriculture
spelling doaj-art-f44420db63724ad995461c4ad594b8d82025-02-03T01:03:39ZengWileyAdvances in Agriculture2356-654X2314-75392020-01-01202010.1155/2020/88662308866230Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern EthiopiaDamte Balcha Gadana0Parshotam Datt Sharma1Dereje Tsegaye Selfeko2Department of Plant Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, EthiopiaDepartment of Plant Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, EthiopiaDepartment of Plant Science, College of Agricultural Sciences, Arba Minch University, Arba Minch, EthiopiaSoil degradation is a serious problem challenging food security in Ethiopia. To halt degradation and restore impoverished soils, the government has initiated soil management practices in the affected areas. Still, there is little information on the impact of these practices in terms of improvement in soil fertility of cultivated lands under different soil and climatic conditions. Accordingly, the study was carried out to study the effect of soil management practices, viz, soil bund (SB), application of farm yard manure (FYM), soil bund integrated with FYM (SBFYM), and vis-a-vis no management practice (NM), on soil fertility under upper (20%–30%) and lower (2%–10%) slope ranges at Mawula watershed, Loma district, Southern Ethiopia. Twenty-four composite soil samples (4 practices × 2 slope ranges × 3 sites) drawn from the surface layer (0–20 cm) were analysed for different physical and chemical properties indicative of soil fertility. The data were analysed statistically in a randomized complete block design. All the soil management practices improved significantly the different aspects of physical and chemical fertility (soil texture, bulk density, total porosity, moisture content, organic carbon, and contents of macro and micronutrients, viz, N, P, K, Na, Ca, Mg, Fe, Mn, Zn, and Cu). The practice SBFYM was significantly superior to FYM and SB. The order of performance was SBFYM > FYM > SB > NM. The usefulness of soil management practices was further corroborated by the farmers’ response (based on semistructured questionnaires), as 83% of them perceived the practices well and opted for their adoption. As such, the soil management practices, notably SBFYM, merit their implementation on a large scale to improve fertility and productivity of degraded lands.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8866230
spellingShingle Damte Balcha Gadana
Parshotam Datt Sharma
Dereje Tsegaye Selfeko
Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
Advances in Agriculture
title Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
title_full Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
title_short Effect of Soil Management Practices and Slope on Soil Fertility of Cultivated Lands in Mawula Watershed, Loma District, Southern Ethiopia
title_sort effect of soil management practices and slope on soil fertility of cultivated lands in mawula watershed loma district southern ethiopia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8866230
work_keys_str_mv AT damtebalchagadana effectofsoilmanagementpracticesandslopeonsoilfertilityofcultivatedlandsinmawulawatershedlomadistrictsouthernethiopia
AT parshotamdattsharma effectofsoilmanagementpracticesandslopeonsoilfertilityofcultivatedlandsinmawulawatershedlomadistrictsouthernethiopia
AT derejetsegayeselfeko effectofsoilmanagementpracticesandslopeonsoilfertilityofcultivatedlandsinmawulawatershedlomadistrictsouthernethiopia