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Soil property changes over a 120-yr chronosequence from forest to agriculture in western Kenya

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Title Soil property changes over a 120-yr chronosequence from forest to agriculture in western Kenya
 
Creator Nyberg G
Bargués Tobella, A.
Kinyangi, James
Ilstedt U
 
Subject agriculture
climate
soil degradation
deforestation
 
Description Much of the native forest in the highlands of western Kenya has been converted to agricultural land in order to feed the growing population, and more land is being cleared. In tropical Africa, this land use change results in progressive soil degradation, as the period of cultivation increases. Both rates and variation in infiltration, soil carbon concentration and other soil parameters are influenced by management within agricultural systems, but they have rarely been well documented in East Africa. We constructed a chronosequence for an area of western Kenya, using two native forest sites and six fields that had been converted to agriculture for up to 119 yr.
 
Date 2012
2014-08-15T12:13:19Z
2014-08-15T12:13:19Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Nyberg G, Bargués Tobella A, Kinyangi J, Ilstedt U. 2012. Soil property changes over a 120-yr chronosequence from forest to agriculture in western Kenya. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 16:2085-2094.
1607-7938
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42042
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-16-2085-2012
 
Language en
 
Rights CC-BY-3.0
Open Access
 
Format p. 2085-2094
 
Publisher Copernicus GmbH
 
Source Hydrology and Earth System Sciences