multivariate statistical method for assessing livestock grazing effects on soil and vegetation in steppe rangelands (case study: steppe rangelands of saveh)
Authors
abstract
this study aims to assess the effect of grazing intensity on vegetation structure, soil nutrient concentrations and soil physical properties. the study was carried out in steppe rangelands of saveh, markazi province, iran. four sites with four grazing intensities including very high, high, moderate and non-grazed with the same ecological conditions were selected. to study various vegetation and soil parameters in each range site, a reference area was selected. then, sampling was performed by randomized systematic method in reference areas. vegetation characteristics, soil physical properties, bulk density, infiltration rate, soil texture and chemical constituents including nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, ph, ec and organic carbon were measured. principal component analysis was performed on a dataset with 22 variables to determine the effect of grazing intensity on vegetation structure and soil properties. results indicated that the first three axes explained the total variation. the variables of potassium, phosphorous, bulk density, class i, class ii, clay, field capacity, infiltration, peganum harmala, salsola laricina, artemisia sieberi and perennial forbs had significant correlations with the first axes and explained a 74.27% variation. for the second components, silt, sand and perennial grasses were more important traits and explained a 15.5% variation. in non-grazed and moderate grazed sites, there were more canopy cover of both artemisia sieberi and salsola laricina, and for high grazing sites, there were plants of class iii such as noaea mucronata and peganum harmala. the grazing intensity was associated with lower values of infiltration, clay percent and field capacity and higher values of bulk density, potassium, phosphorous and sand percent. therefore, vegetation structure and soil properties were changed by the interaction between grazing intensity, soil properties and vegetation structure. the results suggested that excluding grazing livestock on the arid steppes has a great potential to restore vegetation and soil. therefore, it must be encouraged as an alternative to stop further degradation and to combat desertification in arid and semi arid ecosystems.
similar resources
Multivariate Statistical Method for Assessing Livestock Grazing Effects on Soil and Vegetation in Steppe Rangelands (Case Study: Steppe Rangelands of Saveh)
This study aims to assess the effect of grazing intensity on vegetation structure, soil nutrient concentrations and soil physical properties. The study was carried out in steppe rangelands of Saveh, Markazi province, Iran. Four sites with four grazing intensities including very high, high, moderate and non-grazed with the same ecological conditions were selected. To study various vegetation and...
full textEffects of Intermediate-Term Grazing Rest on the Vegetation Characteristics of Steppe Rangelands
The effects of grazing rest on rangelands are different in different climates and knowledge of these effects is necessary to apply correct management. For this purpose, this study was carried out on the percent vegetation cover (PVC) and forage production (FP) of range species at the Nir Range Research Station in Yazd province as a model of steppe rangelands of Iran. In the study area, differen...
full textInteractive effects of animal grazing and land abandonment on infiltration and biological properties of soil in semi-steppe rangelands.
This article has no abstract.
full textEffects of Long-Term Livestock Grazing on Fuel Characteristics in Rangelands: An Example From the Sagebrush Steppe
Livestock grazing potentially has substantial influence on fuel characteristics in rangelands around the globe. However, information quantifying the impacts of grazing on rangeland fuel characteristics is limited, and the effects of grazing on fuels are important because fuel characteristics are one of the primary factors determining risk, severity, continuity, and size of wildfires. We investi...
full textVariation of Plant Functional Groups along Livestock Grazing Gradient in Semi-steppe Rangelands (Case Study: Tangsayad Rangelands of Chaharmahal Bakhtiari Province, Iran)
Assessment and monitoring of rangeland in different grazing managements seems necessary to manage rangelands. The plant functional groups can be used as appropriate responders for rangelands condition and management. Therefore, this study was performed and aimed to determine the most important traits that are influenced by rangeland variation and management. In order to this, three areas along ...
full textThe Effects of Range Management Plans of Soil Properties and Rangelands Vegetation (Case Study: Eshtehard Rangelands)
The effects of Range Management Plans (RMP) on soil and vegetationcharacteristics were studied in Eshtehard rangelands at Alborz province. The parameters ofyield, canopy cover, range condition and trend, bulk density, Organic Matter (OM%),Nitrogen (N), Phosphorous (P) and Potassium (K) were estimated on soil samples in sitesof Ghenzel Cheshmeh as RMP and sanctum of Rahmanyeh village. The data w...
full textMy Resources
Save resource for easier access later
Journal title:
journal of rangeland sciencePublisher: islamic azad university, boroujerd branch
ISSN 2008-9996
volume 2
issue 3 2012
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023