Land degradation and depletion of natural forests made agriculture unsustainable and threaten communities and ecosystems as a whole. The objective of this participatory assessment was to identify researchable issues related to agricultural land and vegetation cover in Gurage zone. Accordingly, seven representative districts were selected and from each district two representative kebeles were purposively selected. Focus Group Discussion with farmers, development agents and subject matter specialists and direct observation were important primary sources of information. The survey result depicts in the Gurage zone land degradation, undulating steep slope topography, small and overwhelmed land tenure, inappropriate land use system, cultural landscape mismanagement, deforestation of indigenous trees and expansion of eucalyptus tree, and decreasing enset production are the major identified problems associated with land use and vegetation cover of the study area. In the mixed farming system, enset is produced as a homestead farm and its coverage is decreasing due to disease, lack of processing machines, and shortage of organic matter. Due to the expansion of eucalyptus and land use change, the majority of native trees are disappearing or decreasing in area coverage. Therefore, enset and eucalyptus require suitable policy attention. In the mountainous areas of Gurage; limited land availability, soil degradation, shortage of appropriate farm technologies, water scarcity, lack of knowledge for alpine agriculture and inconvenient topography for mechanized farming machines issues threaten agriculture of area. Despite the fact that there are few attempts to control land degradation; the issue still needs much attention. Appropriate agricultural technologies and knowledge suited for mountain agriculture, dense populations, enset-based farming systems, and small land tenure are important priority research focus areas for future research.
Published in | American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry (Volume 12, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15 |
Page(s) | 271-281 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Land Degradation, Enset, Eucalyptus, Topography, Mountain Agriculture
Woredas | Kebeles | Altitude (m) | Longitude | Latitude | AEZ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abeshge | Fite-Jeju | 1549 | 37°59290’ E | 08’32277° N | Kola |
Tawla-Gefersa | 1775 | 37°68657’ E | 08’28196° N | Kola | |
Cheha | Wurerber | 1930 | 37°84488’ E | 08’17713° N | Weinadega |
Moche | 2579 | 38°01347’ E | 08’06332° N | Dega | |
Gumer | Fetazer | 2906 | 38°07781’ E | 08’02156° N | Dega |
Abesuja | 2770 | 38°10481’ E | 07’95782° N | Dega | |
Muhir-Aklil | Echene | 2807 | 38°14467’ E | 08’184130 N | Dega |
Chebo | 2074 | 38°05851’ E | 08’289730 N | Weinadega | |
G/G/Welene | Tilamo | 2646 | 38°23531’ E | 08’399210 N | Dega |
Deneb | 2205 | 38°08431’ E | 08’24110° N | Weinadega | |
East Meskan | Emerwacho | 1864 | 38°28314’ E | 08’09214° N | Kola |
Bati-Lejano | 1827 | 38°47639’ E | 08’10252° N | Kola | |
Sodo | Adele-Borebor | 1874 | 38°55504’ E | 08’17263° N | Kola |
Amawte-Giftge | 2607 | 38°53221’ E | 08’42965° N | Dega |
Class | Slope (%) | Slope gradient class |
---|---|---|
1 | 0-3 | Flat to gentle |
2 | 3-12 | Moderate |
3 | 12-20 | Steep |
4 | 20-35 | Very steep |
5 | >35 | Extreme |
Land use type | Area coverage (ha) |
---|---|
Annual crops coverage | 224,406.26 |
Perennial crops coverage | 246,817.06 |
Cultivated total | 471,223.32 |
Grass land | 26,196.25 |
Natural forest | 22,296.50 |
Community forest | 2,217.96 |
Government owned | 2,733.00 |
Private owned | 31,381.50 |
Forest total | 58,628.96 |
Riverine land | 3,528.20 |
Cultivable but not cultivated | 29,711.02 |
Waste land | 5,987.72 |
Others | 42,038.80 |
Total Area | 637,314.27 |
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APA Style
Nekir, B., Yaekob, T., Negash, F., Bekele, T. (2024). Participatory Assessment of Agriculture Land and Vegetation Associated Issues and Possible Interventions in Gurage Zone, Ethiopia. American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry, 12(4), 271-281. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15
ACS Style
Nekir, B.; Yaekob, T.; Negash, F.; Bekele, T. Participatory Assessment of Agriculture Land and Vegetation Associated Issues and Possible Interventions in Gurage Zone, Ethiopia. Am. J. Agric. For. 2024, 12(4), 271-281. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15
AMA Style
Nekir B, Yaekob T, Negash F, Bekele T. Participatory Assessment of Agriculture Land and Vegetation Associated Issues and Possible Interventions in Gurage Zone, Ethiopia. Am J Agric For. 2024;12(4):271-281. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15
@article{10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15, author = {Bethel Nekir and Tesfaye Yaekob and Fetta Negash and Teshome Bekele}, title = {Participatory Assessment of Agriculture Land and Vegetation Associated Issues and Possible Interventions in Gurage Zone, Ethiopia }, journal = {American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {271-281}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajaf.20241204.15}, abstract = {Land degradation and depletion of natural forests made agriculture unsustainable and threaten communities and ecosystems as a whole. The objective of this participatory assessment was to identify researchable issues related to agricultural land and vegetation cover in Gurage zone. Accordingly, seven representative districts were selected and from each district two representative kebeles were purposively selected. Focus Group Discussion with farmers, development agents and subject matter specialists and direct observation were important primary sources of information. The survey result depicts in the Gurage zone land degradation, undulating steep slope topography, small and overwhelmed land tenure, inappropriate land use system, cultural landscape mismanagement, deforestation of indigenous trees and expansion of eucalyptus tree, and decreasing enset production are the major identified problems associated with land use and vegetation cover of the study area. In the mixed farming system, enset is produced as a homestead farm and its coverage is decreasing due to disease, lack of processing machines, and shortage of organic matter. Due to the expansion of eucalyptus and land use change, the majority of native trees are disappearing or decreasing in area coverage. Therefore, enset and eucalyptus require suitable policy attention. In the mountainous areas of Gurage; limited land availability, soil degradation, shortage of appropriate farm technologies, water scarcity, lack of knowledge for alpine agriculture and inconvenient topography for mechanized farming machines issues threaten agriculture of area. Despite the fact that there are few attempts to control land degradation; the issue still needs much attention. Appropriate agricultural technologies and knowledge suited for mountain agriculture, dense populations, enset-based farming systems, and small land tenure are important priority research focus areas for future research. }, year = {2024} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Participatory Assessment of Agriculture Land and Vegetation Associated Issues and Possible Interventions in Gurage Zone, Ethiopia AU - Bethel Nekir AU - Tesfaye Yaekob AU - Fetta Negash AU - Teshome Bekele Y1 - 2024/07/23 PY - 2024 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15 DO - 10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15 T2 - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry JF - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry JO - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry SP - 271 EP - 281 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8591 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20241204.15 AB - Land degradation and depletion of natural forests made agriculture unsustainable and threaten communities and ecosystems as a whole. The objective of this participatory assessment was to identify researchable issues related to agricultural land and vegetation cover in Gurage zone. Accordingly, seven representative districts were selected and from each district two representative kebeles were purposively selected. Focus Group Discussion with farmers, development agents and subject matter specialists and direct observation were important primary sources of information. The survey result depicts in the Gurage zone land degradation, undulating steep slope topography, small and overwhelmed land tenure, inappropriate land use system, cultural landscape mismanagement, deforestation of indigenous trees and expansion of eucalyptus tree, and decreasing enset production are the major identified problems associated with land use and vegetation cover of the study area. In the mixed farming system, enset is produced as a homestead farm and its coverage is decreasing due to disease, lack of processing machines, and shortage of organic matter. Due to the expansion of eucalyptus and land use change, the majority of native trees are disappearing or decreasing in area coverage. Therefore, enset and eucalyptus require suitable policy attention. In the mountainous areas of Gurage; limited land availability, soil degradation, shortage of appropriate farm technologies, water scarcity, lack of knowledge for alpine agriculture and inconvenient topography for mechanized farming machines issues threaten agriculture of area. Despite the fact that there are few attempts to control land degradation; the issue still needs much attention. Appropriate agricultural technologies and knowledge suited for mountain agriculture, dense populations, enset-based farming systems, and small land tenure are important priority research focus areas for future research. VL - 12 IS - 4 ER -