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Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar

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Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar. / Randrianarison, Andry; Schlaepfer, Rodolphe; Mills, Robert et al.
In: Applied Vegetation Science, Vol. 19, No. 1, 01.2016, p. 40-52.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Randrianarison, A, Schlaepfer, R, Mills, R, Herve, D, Razanaka, S, Rakotoarimanana, V, Carriere, SM & Buttler, A 2016, 'Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar', Applied Vegetation Science, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 40-52. https://doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12202

APA

Randrianarison, A., Schlaepfer, R., Mills, R., Herve, D., Razanaka, S., Rakotoarimanana, V., Carriere, S. M., & Buttler, A. (2016). Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar. Applied Vegetation Science, 19(1), 40-52. https://doi.org/10.1111/avsc.12202

Vancouver

Randrianarison A, Schlaepfer R, Mills R, Herve D, Razanaka S, Rakotoarimanana V et al. Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar. Applied Vegetation Science. 2016 Jan;19(1):40-52. Epub 2015 Oct 7. doi: 10.1111/avsc.12202

Author

Randrianarison, Andry ; Schlaepfer, Rodolphe ; Mills, Robert et al. / Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar. In: Applied Vegetation Science. 2016 ; Vol. 19, No. 1. pp. 40-52.

Bibtex

@article{ff49dda637174216a7756b2c20b7aec2,
title = "Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar",
abstract = "Aim: In this paper, we link historical land use of cultivated parcels formerly slashed and burnt, with current secondary vegetation and soil characteristics, in the region of evergreen rain forest in Madagascar. Aim is to understand the legacy effect of former cultivation practices in order to optimize slash-and-burn cultivation.Location: Forest corridor of Fianarantsoa, southeast Madagascar.Methods: We examined three study sites to capture the ecological range in the forest corridor of Fianarantsoa. At each site, we selected formerly hand-cultivated parcels since first forest clearing so as to represent up to four classes of age of abandonment, encompassing forest fallow periods after cultivation of 0-5, 6-10, 11-20 and 21-30 yrs. These parcels served for selection of 50 plots. Interviews were conducted with each farmer to document former cultivation practices of the parcels, and from these, land-use metrics were calculated. Vegetation was surveyed in the plots and soil samples were taken and analysed for chemical and physical properties of the organo-mineral layer (horizon A).Results: We found that soil properties, such as pH, have higher values with an increasing number of cultivation cycles and duration of cultivation, and that this trend is inversely related to exchangeable P. C/N ratio is correlated to age of abandonment, and inversely related to soil N content. With increasing age of abandonment, species richness and diversity increase due mainly to an increase in ligneous species. The number of herbaceous and fern species increases with duration of cultivation and number of cultivation cycles.Conclusion: Historical land use has had a lasting effect on vegetation and even longer-term effect on soils. Different land-use variables explain soil and vegetation characteristics of the current secondary forest. The ability of soils to recover P appears unrelated to abandonment duration, suggesting that longer periods of time are required to recover P fertility, or that secondary vegetation is shifting the pool of nutrients into biomass. Our results point to the need for a management regime that would maintain both scattered trees and patches of a grass layer, since this might be key to promoting both biodiversity and soil restoration.",
keywords = "Evergreen rain forest, Madagascar, Secondary vegetation, Shifting cultivation, Soil fertility, WOOD ASH, FALLOW, BIODIVERSITY, AGRICULTURE, SUCCESSION, HOTSPOTS, STOCKS",
author = "Andry Randrianarison and Rodolphe Schlaepfer and Robert Mills and Dominique Herve and Samuel Razanaka and Vonjison Rakotoarimanana and Carriere, {Stephanie M.} and Alexandre Buttler",
year = "2016",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1111/avsc.12202",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "40--52",
journal = "Applied Vegetation Science",
issn = "1402-2001",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Linking historical land use to present vegetation and soil characteristics under slash-and-burn cultivation in Madagascar

AU - Randrianarison, Andry

AU - Schlaepfer, Rodolphe

AU - Mills, Robert

AU - Herve, Dominique

AU - Razanaka, Samuel

AU - Rakotoarimanana, Vonjison

AU - Carriere, Stephanie M.

AU - Buttler, Alexandre

PY - 2016/1

Y1 - 2016/1

N2 - Aim: In this paper, we link historical land use of cultivated parcels formerly slashed and burnt, with current secondary vegetation and soil characteristics, in the region of evergreen rain forest in Madagascar. Aim is to understand the legacy effect of former cultivation practices in order to optimize slash-and-burn cultivation.Location: Forest corridor of Fianarantsoa, southeast Madagascar.Methods: We examined three study sites to capture the ecological range in the forest corridor of Fianarantsoa. At each site, we selected formerly hand-cultivated parcels since first forest clearing so as to represent up to four classes of age of abandonment, encompassing forest fallow periods after cultivation of 0-5, 6-10, 11-20 and 21-30 yrs. These parcels served for selection of 50 plots. Interviews were conducted with each farmer to document former cultivation practices of the parcels, and from these, land-use metrics were calculated. Vegetation was surveyed in the plots and soil samples were taken and analysed for chemical and physical properties of the organo-mineral layer (horizon A).Results: We found that soil properties, such as pH, have higher values with an increasing number of cultivation cycles and duration of cultivation, and that this trend is inversely related to exchangeable P. C/N ratio is correlated to age of abandonment, and inversely related to soil N content. With increasing age of abandonment, species richness and diversity increase due mainly to an increase in ligneous species. The number of herbaceous and fern species increases with duration of cultivation and number of cultivation cycles.Conclusion: Historical land use has had a lasting effect on vegetation and even longer-term effect on soils. Different land-use variables explain soil and vegetation characteristics of the current secondary forest. The ability of soils to recover P appears unrelated to abandonment duration, suggesting that longer periods of time are required to recover P fertility, or that secondary vegetation is shifting the pool of nutrients into biomass. Our results point to the need for a management regime that would maintain both scattered trees and patches of a grass layer, since this might be key to promoting both biodiversity and soil restoration.

AB - Aim: In this paper, we link historical land use of cultivated parcels formerly slashed and burnt, with current secondary vegetation and soil characteristics, in the region of evergreen rain forest in Madagascar. Aim is to understand the legacy effect of former cultivation practices in order to optimize slash-and-burn cultivation.Location: Forest corridor of Fianarantsoa, southeast Madagascar.Methods: We examined three study sites to capture the ecological range in the forest corridor of Fianarantsoa. At each site, we selected formerly hand-cultivated parcels since first forest clearing so as to represent up to four classes of age of abandonment, encompassing forest fallow periods after cultivation of 0-5, 6-10, 11-20 and 21-30 yrs. These parcels served for selection of 50 plots. Interviews were conducted with each farmer to document former cultivation practices of the parcels, and from these, land-use metrics were calculated. Vegetation was surveyed in the plots and soil samples were taken and analysed for chemical and physical properties of the organo-mineral layer (horizon A).Results: We found that soil properties, such as pH, have higher values with an increasing number of cultivation cycles and duration of cultivation, and that this trend is inversely related to exchangeable P. C/N ratio is correlated to age of abandonment, and inversely related to soil N content. With increasing age of abandonment, species richness and diversity increase due mainly to an increase in ligneous species. The number of herbaceous and fern species increases with duration of cultivation and number of cultivation cycles.Conclusion: Historical land use has had a lasting effect on vegetation and even longer-term effect on soils. Different land-use variables explain soil and vegetation characteristics of the current secondary forest. The ability of soils to recover P appears unrelated to abandonment duration, suggesting that longer periods of time are required to recover P fertility, or that secondary vegetation is shifting the pool of nutrients into biomass. Our results point to the need for a management regime that would maintain both scattered trees and patches of a grass layer, since this might be key to promoting both biodiversity and soil restoration.

KW - Evergreen rain forest

KW - Madagascar

KW - Secondary vegetation

KW - Shifting cultivation

KW - Soil fertility

KW - WOOD ASH

KW - FALLOW

KW - BIODIVERSITY

KW - AGRICULTURE

KW - SUCCESSION

KW - HOTSPOTS

KW - STOCKS

U2 - 10.1111/avsc.12202

DO - 10.1111/avsc.12202

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 40

EP - 52

JO - Applied Vegetation Science

JF - Applied Vegetation Science

SN - 1402-2001

IS - 1

ER -