Relationship between vegetation growth rates at the onset of the wet season and soil type in the Sahel of Burkina Faso: implications for resource utilisation at large scales
Publication date
2002
Authors
Kumar, L.
Rietkerk, M.G.
Langevelde, F. van
Koppel, J. van de
Andel, J. van
Hearne, J.
Ridder, N. de
Stroosnijder, L.
Skidmore, A.K.
Prins, H.H.T.
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DOI
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Article
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Abstract
In the Sahel, poor soil quality and rainfall levels have a great influence on pasture production and hence on
secondary output. In areas where rainfall is the limiting factor for primary production, recovery of primary and
secondary production after the dry season depends on soil type. On sandy soils a large fraction of rainfall infiltrates
and becomes available for plant growth, stimulating fast herbage growth, while on clayey and loamy soils low
infiltration rates generate runoff, leading to slower herbage growth rates. The very different moisture retention
characteristic of sands and clays is another possible cause for the observed differences in growth rates. In this paper
we investigate the herbage growth rate from the onset of the rainy season. We hypothesise that, in areas where rainfall
is the limiting factor for primary production, the vegetation growth rate on clayey soils is lower than that on sandy
soils. We will test this hypothesis using long-term rainfall, soil types and satellite derived normalised difference
vegetation index data. This research shows that the growth rates on sandy soil are significantly greater than that on
clayey soils during the early part of the rainy season. We also show that these differences can be detected at large
scales using satellite imagery. We also conclude that, at this scale, movement strategies of pastoralists would be intrinsically linked to not only rainfall patterns and distribution, but also to the underlying soil types in the region
as this affects the quality and quantity of fodder available.
Keywords
Herbage growth, Soil hydrology, Semi-arid grazing systems, Remote sensing, NOAA–AVHRR, Normalised difference vegetation index