4.5 Article

Land degradation on barren hills: A case study in northeast Vietnam

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 19-36

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-008-9099-1

Keywords

barren hills; fallow succession; Vietnam; land degradation; water buffalo; land use policy

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The term barren hills has been a keyword for land degradation in the uplands of Vietnam for over a decade. Nevertheless, the barren land is still not adequately ecologically characterized. In this work, we analyze land use-induced changes in vegetation and soil properties along a sequence of barren hills types formed on one physiotope. The study is undertaken in the Bac Kan province, one of the poorest upland regions where livestock plays an important role. A transition from an old-growth laurel forest to a sparse manmade grassland is characterized by a total of 177 species, rapid species turnover, and discrete dominants, and an overwhelming effect of disturbance history on both soil and vegetation patterning. Land degradation is most apparent in land use-induced maintenance of arrested successions, and the regeneration course is shifted towards drier formations. We hypothesize a conceptual model as an aid to understanding the process of early fallow differentiation in response to the patterned, fine-scale disturbances. The larger-scale implications of the observed trends in regeneration potentials deviation, and, in particular, the effect of water buffaloes in halting fallow successions, are discussed.

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