Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters

Poor land-use practices have threatened the livelihood of rural people in Ethiopia. This study assessed the local perception of the impact of land degradation on rural livelihood in the Blue Nile river headwaters, North Gojjam sub-basin. To achieve this objective, questionnaires were administered f...

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Main Author: Alelgn Ewuntu Temesgen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association of Geographers 2022-10-01
Series:European Journal of Geography
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eurogeojournal.eu/index.php/egj/article/view/255
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author Alelgn Ewuntu Temesgen
author_facet Alelgn Ewuntu Temesgen
author_sort Alelgn Ewuntu Temesgen
collection DOAJ
description Poor land-use practices have threatened the livelihood of rural people in Ethiopia. This study assessed the local perception of the impact of land degradation on rural livelihood in the Blue Nile river headwaters, North Gojjam sub-basin. To achieve this objective, questionnaires were administered for 414 sample households and series of focus group discussions and detailed interviews were held with participants. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze quantitative data while qualitative data were buildup using narration and simple description approaches. The finding showed that all local farmers perceived that land degradation was the main local ecological problem since 2008 in the form of soil erosion, soil nutrient depletion; soil acidity and soil biodiversity loss. Most of them (62.54%) perceived as land degradation severity was high and increasing through time, primarily on cereal crop land. Population growth, using animal dung and crop residue for domestic cooking and heating energy, free grazing, using crop residue for construction, absence of fallowing, poor farming, steep slope, and using inappropriate SWC technologies are the main causes of land degradation in the study area. Most local farmers observed as land degradation has decreased crop and livestock productivity, firewood, and surface water resources accessibility. These resulted in the decline in households’ food security and net income over the last 10 years. The finding showed that farmers used traditional ditche, hillside terrace, soil bund, stone bund, check dam, and waterway to reduce land degradation. 
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spelling doaj-art-2942c6774a7d44fc819c1055fe894aa32025-01-06T06:58:59ZengEuropean Association of GeographersEuropean Journal of Geography1792-13412410-74332022-10-0113310.48088/ejg.a.ewu.13.3.087.104Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River HeadwatersAlelgn Ewuntu Temesgen0Universitat de les Illes Balears, Spain Poor land-use practices have threatened the livelihood of rural people in Ethiopia. This study assessed the local perception of the impact of land degradation on rural livelihood in the Blue Nile river headwaters, North Gojjam sub-basin. To achieve this objective, questionnaires were administered for 414 sample households and series of focus group discussions and detailed interviews were held with participants. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze quantitative data while qualitative data were buildup using narration and simple description approaches. The finding showed that all local farmers perceived that land degradation was the main local ecological problem since 2008 in the form of soil erosion, soil nutrient depletion; soil acidity and soil biodiversity loss. Most of them (62.54%) perceived as land degradation severity was high and increasing through time, primarily on cereal crop land. Population growth, using animal dung and crop residue for domestic cooking and heating energy, free grazing, using crop residue for construction, absence of fallowing, poor farming, steep slope, and using inappropriate SWC technologies are the main causes of land degradation in the study area. Most local farmers observed as land degradation has decreased crop and livestock productivity, firewood, and surface water resources accessibility. These resulted in the decline in households’ food security and net income over the last 10 years. The finding showed that farmers used traditional ditche, hillside terrace, soil bund, stone bund, check dam, and waterway to reduce land degradation.  https://eurogeojournal.eu/index.php/egj/article/view/255land degradationlivelihood impactfarmers’ perceptionEthiopia
spellingShingle Alelgn Ewuntu Temesgen
Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
European Journal of Geography
land degradation
livelihood impact
farmers’ perception
Ethiopia
title Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
title_full Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
title_fullStr Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
title_full_unstemmed Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
title_short Local Perception on Effect of Land Degradation in the Blue Nile River Headwaters
title_sort local perception on effect of land degradation in the blue nile river headwaters
topic land degradation
livelihood impact
farmers’ perception
Ethiopia
url https://eurogeojournal.eu/index.php/egj/article/view/255
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