Journal of Environmental Protection

Volume 6, Issue 8 (August 2015)

ISSN Print: 2152-2197   ISSN Online: 2152-2219

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.42  Citations  

Influence of Livestock Farming on Vegetation in a Degraded Soil Area on the East Coast of Lake Victoria in Western Kenya: A Case Study of Jimo East Sub-Location in Nyando Sub-County

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 921KB)  PP. 824-836  
DOI: 10.4236/jep.2015.68075    3,287 Downloads   4,443 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

In the study area located in Western Kenya near the Lake Victoria, severe soil erosion occurred and it thought to relate to vegetation degradation caused by overgrazing. The livestock density estimated by analyzing satellite image (1.39 TLU/ha for available grazing lands) was lower than that of measured for seven farmers’ grazing lands using GPSs (4.41 TLU/ha, 2011) with variation from 0.83 to 12.36 TLU/ha. Thus, it is clear that the grasslands used by farmers are limited compared with the area of estimated available land for grazing identified by analyzing the satellite image. According to growth-consumption rate model that was developed by the Nyangito et al. (2008) in southeastern Kenya, if livestock density reaches over 7 TLU/ha, pasture growth rate became lower than consumption rate. Grass biomasses of the grazing lands were kept low (less than 50 g/50 × 50 cm2) under high livestock density (three farmers out of seven were higher than 7 TLU/ha). In addition, rainfall pattern is very unstable and we observed stunted growth of grasses during dry spells. Therefore, we concluded that overgrazing. It means that inhibition of continuous re-growth of grasses due to high grazing pressure has been occurred even for small area and contributed to the soil erosion.

Share and Cite:

Yamane, Y. , Asanuma, S. and Umenura, K. (2015) Influence of Livestock Farming on Vegetation in a Degraded Soil Area on the East Coast of Lake Victoria in Western Kenya: A Case Study of Jimo East Sub-Location in Nyando Sub-County. Journal of Environmental Protection, 6, 824-836. doi: 10.4236/jep.2015.68075.

Cited by

[1] A perspective of sustainable livelihood framework in analysis of sustainability of rural community livelihoods: evidence from Migori River watershed in Kenya
International Journal of River …, 2023
[2] Role of income from rice cultivation on livelihoods of rice farmers: Evidence from Ahero Region, Kenya
African Journal of Agricultural Research, 2023
[3] Socio-demographic Determinants of Soil Erosion Levels among the Farming Households in Nyakach Sub-county, Kenya
IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science, 2019
[4] Effects of Epigeal Termitaria physiography, altitude and location on vegetation lifeforms abundance in Katolo sub-location, Kisumu county, Kenya
2018
[5] Effects of Locations On-and Off-Epigeal Termitaria on Vegetation Lifeforms in Katolo Sub-Location of Kisumu County, Kenya
2017
[6] Strengthening Farmer Adaptive Capacity Through Farms of the Future Approach in Nyando, Western Kenya
Climate Change Adaptation in Africa, 2017
[7] Modeling Vegetation Lifeforms Abundance based on Epigeal Termitaria Physiography and Altitude in Tropical Savannah of Katolo Sub-Location, Kisumu …
2017

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.