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Quantification of the soil-water balance under different veld condition classes in a semi-arid climate


HA Snyman

Abstract

The monthly herbage production, water-use efficiency (WUE: above-ground phytomass production per unit of evapotranspiration), surface runoff and soil loss were determined on grassland in three different ecological conditions, viz. poor, moderate and good, over a four
year (1995/1996 to 1998/1999) period. In addition the same measurements were also made on an undisturbed bare soil surface and a soil cultivated twice per annum, only for the last four years. Herbage production and water-use efficiency decreased (P<0.01) when plant
cover was reduced or grassland and soil condition declined. The effect of rainfall on productivity is enhanced as plant composition improves from poor through moderate to good. The highest seasonal WUE of 4.76kg ha-1mm-1 occurred in grassland in good condition. The dense plant cover of grassland in good condition provides a situation in which surface runoff and soil loss are lower (P<0.01) than that from
grassland in poor condition. Direct evaporation from the bare uncultivated soil surface was on average 69% of the rainfall. These monthly production and water-use efficiency results are of the few, if not the only, data available for the semi-arid climates of southern Africa
and can be used with great success infuture fodder flow planning.

Keywords: Evapotranspiration, soil erosion, soil-water content, surface runoff, water-use efficiency

African Journal of Range & Forage Science 16(2&3): 108–11

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1727-9380
print ISSN: 1022-0119