A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia

A substantial tree planting from exotic tree species has been practiced in Ethiopia during the last ten decades. Yet, the efforts made to restore degraded areas using exotic tree species but with less emphasis given to the indigenous tree species for enhancing biodiversity conservation and ecosystem...

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Main Authors: Habte Wendime Gemechu, Debissa Lemessa, Dereje Bekele Jiru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Trees, Forests and People
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719320300595
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spelling doaj-52be753abc9540f7a664c4b2b0f759382021-04-18T06:32:42ZengElsevierTrees, Forests and People2666-71932021-06-014100059A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest EthiopiaHabte Wendime Gemechu0Debissa Lemessa1Dereje Bekele Jiru2Department of Natural Resource Management, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia; Corresponding author at: College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Jimma University, P.O. Box: 307, Jimma town, Ethiopia.Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaDepartment of Natural Resource Management, College of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Jimma University, Jimma, EthiopiaA substantial tree planting from exotic tree species has been practiced in Ethiopia during the last ten decades. Yet, the efforts made to restore degraded areas using exotic tree species but with less emphasis given to the indigenous tree species for enhancing biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services could not bring the desired results. The aim of this study was, therefore, to undertake the comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices across landuse types in agricultural landscapes of southwest Ethiopia. Five rural kebeles were purposively selected from three districts of Jimma zone based on the status of tree planting practices. Similarly, after the households who possessed five landuse types were identified, 2−9 households were randomly selected from each rural kebeles and in total 31, 18 and 19 households were proportionally selected from the three districts of Mana, Kersa, and Seka Chekorsa respectively. A complete tree assessment was undertaken in five landuse types (homegarden, crop land, woodlot, grazing land and farm boundary) of the households. In total, 340 landuse plots were assessed. A Shannon-Weiner diversity index (H’) was computed to compare species diversity of both indigenous and exotic tree species across landuse types. One-way ANOVA was employed to test the variation in species richness and diversity among landuse types. The result showed that a total of 44 tree species (33 indigenous and 11 exotic) belonging to 29 families were identified and recorded. The species diversity of indigenous and exotic trees significantly varies among landuse types. The diversity of indigenous tree species was higher in homegardens and crop lands but no species was recorded in woodlot landuse type. On the other hand, the diversity of exotic tree species was higher in homegardens but no species was recorded in grazing land. Our results highlight that the existing traditional practices of managing indigenous and exotic tree species by smallholder farmers in their farming systems are among the key considerations that need to be further strengthened in designing biodiversity conservation strategy in the agroecosystems of southwestern Ethiopia.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719320300595Farming communityIndigenous tree speciesExotic tree speciesLanduse types
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Habte Wendime Gemechu
Debissa Lemessa
Dereje Bekele Jiru
spellingShingle Habte Wendime Gemechu
Debissa Lemessa
Dereje Bekele Jiru
A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
Trees, Forests and People
Farming community
Indigenous tree species
Exotic tree species
Landuse types
author_facet Habte Wendime Gemechu
Debissa Lemessa
Dereje Bekele Jiru
author_sort Habte Wendime Gemechu
title A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
title_short A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
title_full A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
title_fullStr A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed A comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of Southwest Ethiopia
title_sort comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices in agricultural landscapes of southwest ethiopia
publisher Elsevier
series Trees, Forests and People
issn 2666-7193
publishDate 2021-06-01
description A substantial tree planting from exotic tree species has been practiced in Ethiopia during the last ten decades. Yet, the efforts made to restore degraded areas using exotic tree species but with less emphasis given to the indigenous tree species for enhancing biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services could not bring the desired results. The aim of this study was, therefore, to undertake the comparative analysis of indigenous and exotic tree species management practices across landuse types in agricultural landscapes of southwest Ethiopia. Five rural kebeles were purposively selected from three districts of Jimma zone based on the status of tree planting practices. Similarly, after the households who possessed five landuse types were identified, 2−9 households were randomly selected from each rural kebeles and in total 31, 18 and 19 households were proportionally selected from the three districts of Mana, Kersa, and Seka Chekorsa respectively. A complete tree assessment was undertaken in five landuse types (homegarden, crop land, woodlot, grazing land and farm boundary) of the households. In total, 340 landuse plots were assessed. A Shannon-Weiner diversity index (H’) was computed to compare species diversity of both indigenous and exotic tree species across landuse types. One-way ANOVA was employed to test the variation in species richness and diversity among landuse types. The result showed that a total of 44 tree species (33 indigenous and 11 exotic) belonging to 29 families were identified and recorded. The species diversity of indigenous and exotic trees significantly varies among landuse types. The diversity of indigenous tree species was higher in homegardens and crop lands but no species was recorded in woodlot landuse type. On the other hand, the diversity of exotic tree species was higher in homegardens but no species was recorded in grazing land. Our results highlight that the existing traditional practices of managing indigenous and exotic tree species by smallholder farmers in their farming systems are among the key considerations that need to be further strengthened in designing biodiversity conservation strategy in the agroecosystems of southwestern Ethiopia.
topic Farming community
Indigenous tree species
Exotic tree species
Landuse types
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719320300595
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