4.7 Article

Soil fertility in slash and burn agricultural systems in central Mozambique

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 322, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116031

Keywords

Soil fertility; Sustainability; Slash and burn agriculture; Tropical soils; Forest -fallow

Funding

  1. Applied Research and Multi- sectorial Program (FIAM) - Italian Agency for Development Cooperation [5.2.1]
  2. Polytechnic University of Marche (Italy)

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Slash and burn is a widely used land use practice, but its sustainability has been questioned due to soil degradation. This study investigated rural areas in Mozambique to assess soil quality in agricultural and forest soils at different ages of the forest-fallow period.
Slash and burn is a land use practice widespread all over the world, and nowadays it is formally recognized as the principal livelihood system in rural areas of South America, Asia, and Africa. The practice consists of a land rotation where users cut native or secondary forest to establish a new crop field and, in some cases, build charcoal kilns with the cut wood to produce charcoal. Due to several socio-economic changes in developing countries, some scientists and international organizations have questioned the sustainability of slash and burn since in some cases, crop yield does not justify the soil degradation caused. To estimate the soil quality in agricultural and forest soils at different ages of the forest-fallow period (25, 35, and 50 years), this survey investigated rural areas in three locations in Manica province, central Mozambique: Vanduzi, Sussundenga, and Macate. Soil profiles were trenched and sampled with a pedological approach under crop fields and forest-fallow. The chronosequence was selected to test the hypothesis that the increase in forest-fallow age causes an improvement of soil fertility. Results highlighted discrete variations among locations in mineralogy, Al-and Fe-oxyhydroxides, sand, silt, pH, total organic carbon, humic carbon, total nitrogen, available phosphorous, chlo-ride, nitrate, fluoride, and ammonium. Few differences in mineralogy, Fe-oxyhydroxides, available P, chloride, and nitrate were detected between crop fields and forest-fallow within the same location. Such differences were mostly ascribed to intrinsic fertility inherited from the parent material rather than a longer forest-fallow period. However, physicochemical soil property improvement did not occur under a forest age of 50 years (the longest forest-fallow considered), indicating that harmonization of intrinsic fertility and agronomic practices may in-crease soil organic matter and nutrient contents more than a long forest-fallow period.

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