Authors
Phesheya Dlamini, Pauline Chivenge, Alan Manson, Vincent Chaplot
Publication date
2014/12/1
Journal
Geoderma
Volume
235
Pages
372-381
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Land degradation is recognized as a main environmental problem that adversely depletes soil organic carbon (SOC) and nitrogen (SON) stocks, which in turn directly affects soils, their fertility, productivity and overall quality. While it is expanding worldwide at rapid pace, quantitative information on the impact of land degradation on the depletion of SOC and SON stocks remains largely unavailable, limiting the ability to predict the impacts of land management on the C losses to the atmosphere and associated global warming. The main objective of this study was to evaluate the consequences of a decrease in grass aerial cover on SOC and SON stocks. A degraded grassland showing an aerial cover gradient from 100% (Cov100, corresponding to a non-degraded grassland) to 50–75% (Cov75), 25–50% (Cov50) and 0–5% (Cov5, corresponding to a heavily degraded grassland), was selected in South Africa. Soil …
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