Degradation and recovery processes in arid grazing lands of central Australia Part 3: implications at landscape scale

Using data from previous studies, we tested two hypotheses about the impacts of grazing in a naturally heterogeneous landscape in arid central Australia: (1) that grazing leads to net change of resources at a paddock or landscape scale, and (2) that water and nutrients remain coupled as they move th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of arid environments 2003-10, Vol.55 (2), p.349-360
Hauptverfasser: Sparrow, A.D., Friedel, M.H., Tongway, D.J.
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container_title Journal of arid environments
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creator Sparrow, A.D.
Friedel, M.H.
Tongway, D.J.
description Using data from previous studies, we tested two hypotheses about the impacts of grazing in a naturally heterogeneous landscape in arid central Australia: (1) that grazing leads to net change of resources at a paddock or landscape scale, and (2) that water and nutrients remain coupled as they move through the landscape. We found that key nutrients were likely to be lost at the landscape scale as grazing increased, rather than just being redistributed. Water infiltration increased but runoff was probably lost more readily due to the lack of barriers to flow. Water and nutrients were largely decoupled. We surmised that any increased production in drainage lines capturing runoff did not compensate for lost production on surrounding slopes. Recovery was unlikely to be spontaneous and would depend on reconstructing the landscape's natural heterogeneity and managing grazing carefully. Options for intervention would be constrained by cost.
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subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Environmental degradation: ecosystems survey and restoration
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Geomorphic strata
Management
Productivity loss
Resource redistribution and decoupling
title Degradation and recovery processes in arid grazing lands of central Australia Part 3: implications at landscape scale
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