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Transition from forest-based to cereal-based agricultural systems : a review of the drivers of land use change and degradation in Southwest Ethiopia

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors explored the impacts of conversions to agroforestry and cereal-based cropping systems on biodiversity, soil fertility, soil loss and the socio-economic conditions and culture.
Abstract
The southwestern Ethiopian montane forests are one of the most species‐rich ecosystems and are recognised globally as a priority area for the conservation of biodiversity. Particularly, in contrast to the drier central and northern Ethiopian highlands, they have received little attention by researchers. Here, we review changes to agricultural systems in and around these forests that are known as the genetic home of coffee (Coffea arabica L.) and that are important to the livelihoods of many rural people who have developed traditional management practices based on agro‐ecological knowledge, religious taboos and customary tenure rights. We explored the impacts of conversions to agroforestry and cereal‐based cropping systems on biodiversity, soil fertility, soil loss and the socio‐economic conditions and culture. The increasing trend of cereal cropping, resettlement and commercial agriculture causes the deterioration of natural forest cover in the region and threatens biodiversity, land quality, sustainable, traditional farming practices and the livelihood of the local community. Large‐scale plantations of tea, coffee, soapberry locally known as endod (Phytolacca dodecandra L'Her.) and cereals have resulted in biodiversity loss. Following the conversion of forests, cultivated fields exhibit a significant decline in soil fertility and an increase in soil loss as compared with the traditional agroforestry system. The establishment of a sustainable agricultural system will require a change in paradigm, whereby the intrinsic values of the traditional forest‐based agricultural system are recognised, rather than the ongoing mimicking of agricultural policies that were developed for the open fields of central Ethiopia. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Natural resource degradation tendencies in Ethiopia: a review

TL;DR: In this paper, the current state of knowledge about the status of land, water, forest, rangeland and wildlife resources, and hence, assesses their degradation tendencies in Ethiopia.
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Impact of deforestation on soil fertility, soil carbon and nitrogen stocks : the case of the Gacheb catchment in the White Nile Basin, Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of deforestation on soil fertility, soil carbon and nitrogen stocks and hypothesize that tropical forests and agroforestry have similar characteristics, in contrast to the deforested areas used as cropland.

Land management in the northern Ethiopian highlands: local and global perspectives; past, present and future

Jan Nyssen
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the past and future of land management in Africa with a focus on northern Ethiopia, where the status of soils and forests change over the last century and how this impact people's livelihoods.
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Assessing the effect of water harvesting techniques on event-based hydrological responses and sediment yield at a catchment scale in northern Ethiopia using the Limburg Soil Erosion Model (LISEM)

TL;DR: In this article, a hydrological and soil-erosion model, LISEM, was applied to the Gule catchment (~ 12 km2) in northern Ethiopia to evaluate its performance in describing event-based hydrologogical processes and sediment yield in a catchment under the influence of different water harvesting techniques.
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Relational values in agroecosystem governance

TL;DR: The authors provide an initial review of some of the relational values articulated for agricultural systems associated with biodiversity conservation in a diverse literature and illustrate that these relational values are complex, contribute to the maintenance of multifunctional landscapes, and frequently do not adequately intersect with current conservation policy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Agro-ecological implications of forest and agroforestry systems conversion to cereal-based farming systems in the White Nile Basin, Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of land use change on species composition, species diversity and soil fertility were evaluated in the Afromontane forests of southwest Ethiopia using 15 plots with three replicates.
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Land Use and Land Cover Changes in the Owabi Reservoir Catchment, Ghana: Implications for Livelihoods and Management

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied land use and land cover changes and their impacts on livelihoods in the Owabi reservoir catchment from 1970 to 2014 using Landsat, ERDAS Imagine and Arc Geographic Information System (ArcGIS 10.2) software supplemented with participatory approaches including focus group discussions, key informant interviews and questionnaire surveys with 400 households.
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Impacts of wetland cultivation on plant diversity and soil fertility in South-Bench District, Southwest Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of wetland cultivation on plant species richness, composition and soil fertility was investigated for 30 plots in each site of adjacent uncultivated and cultivated wetlands sites and total of 60 sampling plots were used.
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Lifescapes and governance: the régulo system in central Mozambique

TL;DR: In Central Mozambique, the primacy of the regulo is based on people's belief in the ancestors, and in the legitimacy of the overseer as both an intermediary between the community and ancestr....
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Ecosystem services from forest and farmland: Present and past access separates beneficiaries in rural Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors surveyed current and past ecosystem service flows from forest and farmland into rural Ethiopian households, finding that over time, flows from forests and those directly benefiting human well-being were perceived to have declined, especially for worse-off groups.
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