Soils of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley escarpment: A transect study

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  • Universität Bayreuth
  • Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
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OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)209-219
Seitenumfang11
FachzeitschriftCATENA
Jahrgang70
Ausgabenummer2
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 15 Juli 2007
Extern publiziertJa

Abstract

The mountainous environment of the Ethiopian highlands has a great variety of ecotopes and thus demands great flexibility in land management. Different climatic conditions and landscape positions induce different soil forming processes, leading to various soil types with specific risks and potentials. The present study portrays a soil sequence of the central section of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley, from the footslopes of the eastern escarpment to the marginal volcano structures. Six profiles under natural vegetation are described for classification according to the USDA Soil Taxonomy and World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification systems, and special site characteristics are discussed. The Acacia savannah of the footslopes (1900 m a. s. l.) is characterized by Vertisols (Mazic Vertisols/Aridic Haplusterts), with often pronounced effects of seasonal waterlogging. All other soils are well-drained and reflect the general increase in rainfall with elevation and slope, causing a decline in topsoil pH and a change from cation-rich clay soils of the Podocarpus-dominated forest at 2300 m a. s. l. (Mollic Nitisols/Typic Palehumults) to strongly-leached Humic Umbrisols/Humic Dystrudepts of the Hagenia-dominated forest around 2600 m a. s. l. The highland savannah plain (2700 m a. s. l.) with a drier and cooler environment has typically Mollic Cambisols/Dystric Haplustepts, which are less leached and have a rather brownish colour. At 2900 m a. s. l., Niti-umbric Alisols/Andic Hapludalfs are found in the Hypericum forest at the midslopes of the marginal volcanoes receiving high rainfall, whereas soil development is at a more initial state in the Erica-dominated forest at 3200 m a. s. l. (Umbric Andosols/Alic Hapludands). Clay mineral composition is kaolinite-dominated for the upper five profiles, with a high proportion of poorly crystalline components in the upper savannah and the volcano upslopes. The lowermost profile probably has a polygenetic origin indicated by an abrupt change from a smectitic to a kaolinitic composition in the subsoil. Soil development on quite homogeneous bedrock appears essentially controlled by relief and climate, underlining the suitability of the region as a model area for in-depth gradient studies on ecosystem processes and land use.

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Soils of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley escarpment: A transect study. / Fritzsche, Florian; Zech, Wolfgang; Guggenberger, Georg.
in: CATENA, Jahrgang 70, Nr. 2, 15.07.2007, S. 209-219.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Fritzsche F, Zech W, Guggenberger G. Soils of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley escarpment: A transect study. CATENA. 2007 Jul 15;70(2):209-219. doi: 10.1016/j.catena.2006.09.005
Fritzsche, Florian ; Zech, Wolfgang ; Guggenberger, Georg. / Soils of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley escarpment: A transect study. in: CATENA. 2007 ; Jahrgang 70, Nr. 2. S. 209-219.
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title = "Soils of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley escarpment:: A transect study",
abstract = "The mountainous environment of the Ethiopian highlands has a great variety of ecotopes and thus demands great flexibility in land management. Different climatic conditions and landscape positions induce different soil forming processes, leading to various soil types with specific risks and potentials. The present study portrays a soil sequence of the central section of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley, from the footslopes of the eastern escarpment to the marginal volcano structures. Six profiles under natural vegetation are described for classification according to the USDA Soil Taxonomy and World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification systems, and special site characteristics are discussed. The Acacia savannah of the footslopes (1900 m a. s. l.) is characterized by Vertisols (Mazic Vertisols/Aridic Haplusterts), with often pronounced effects of seasonal waterlogging. All other soils are well-drained and reflect the general increase in rainfall with elevation and slope, causing a decline in topsoil pH and a change from cation-rich clay soils of the Podocarpus-dominated forest at 2300 m a. s. l. (Mollic Nitisols/Typic Palehumults) to strongly-leached Humic Umbrisols/Humic Dystrudepts of the Hagenia-dominated forest around 2600 m a. s. l. The highland savannah plain (2700 m a. s. l.) with a drier and cooler environment has typically Mollic Cambisols/Dystric Haplustepts, which are less leached and have a rather brownish colour. At 2900 m a. s. l., Niti-umbric Alisols/Andic Hapludalfs are found in the Hypericum forest at the midslopes of the marginal volcanoes receiving high rainfall, whereas soil development is at a more initial state in the Erica-dominated forest at 3200 m a. s. l. (Umbric Andosols/Alic Hapludands). Clay mineral composition is kaolinite-dominated for the upper five profiles, with a high proportion of poorly crystalline components in the upper savannah and the volcano upslopes. The lowermost profile probably has a polygenetic origin indicated by an abrupt change from a smectitic to a kaolinitic composition in the subsoil. Soil development on quite homogeneous bedrock appears essentially controlled by relief and climate, underlining the suitability of the region as a model area for in-depth gradient studies on ecosystem processes and land use.",
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T2 - A transect study

AU - Fritzsche, Florian

AU - Zech, Wolfgang

AU - Guggenberger, Georg

N1 - Funding information: The authors would like to thank the Shashemene Wood Industries Enterprise and the Ethiopian Agricultural Research Organization for their friendly cooperation, namely Betre Alemu for his assistance during field work, as well as Robert Mikutta for recording the XRD spectra. We acknowledge the financial support by the German Research Council (DFG) for our research activities in Munessa Forest.

PY - 2007/7/15

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N2 - The mountainous environment of the Ethiopian highlands has a great variety of ecotopes and thus demands great flexibility in land management. Different climatic conditions and landscape positions induce different soil forming processes, leading to various soil types with specific risks and potentials. The present study portrays a soil sequence of the central section of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley, from the footslopes of the eastern escarpment to the marginal volcano structures. Six profiles under natural vegetation are described for classification according to the USDA Soil Taxonomy and World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification systems, and special site characteristics are discussed. The Acacia savannah of the footslopes (1900 m a. s. l.) is characterized by Vertisols (Mazic Vertisols/Aridic Haplusterts), with often pronounced effects of seasonal waterlogging. All other soils are well-drained and reflect the general increase in rainfall with elevation and slope, causing a decline in topsoil pH and a change from cation-rich clay soils of the Podocarpus-dominated forest at 2300 m a. s. l. (Mollic Nitisols/Typic Palehumults) to strongly-leached Humic Umbrisols/Humic Dystrudepts of the Hagenia-dominated forest around 2600 m a. s. l. The highland savannah plain (2700 m a. s. l.) with a drier and cooler environment has typically Mollic Cambisols/Dystric Haplustepts, which are less leached and have a rather brownish colour. At 2900 m a. s. l., Niti-umbric Alisols/Andic Hapludalfs are found in the Hypericum forest at the midslopes of the marginal volcanoes receiving high rainfall, whereas soil development is at a more initial state in the Erica-dominated forest at 3200 m a. s. l. (Umbric Andosols/Alic Hapludands). Clay mineral composition is kaolinite-dominated for the upper five profiles, with a high proportion of poorly crystalline components in the upper savannah and the volcano upslopes. The lowermost profile probably has a polygenetic origin indicated by an abrupt change from a smectitic to a kaolinitic composition in the subsoil. Soil development on quite homogeneous bedrock appears essentially controlled by relief and climate, underlining the suitability of the region as a model area for in-depth gradient studies on ecosystem processes and land use.

AB - The mountainous environment of the Ethiopian highlands has a great variety of ecotopes and thus demands great flexibility in land management. Different climatic conditions and landscape positions induce different soil forming processes, leading to various soil types with specific risks and potentials. The present study portrays a soil sequence of the central section of the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley, from the footslopes of the eastern escarpment to the marginal volcano structures. Six profiles under natural vegetation are described for classification according to the USDA Soil Taxonomy and World Reference Base for Soil Resources classification systems, and special site characteristics are discussed. The Acacia savannah of the footslopes (1900 m a. s. l.) is characterized by Vertisols (Mazic Vertisols/Aridic Haplusterts), with often pronounced effects of seasonal waterlogging. All other soils are well-drained and reflect the general increase in rainfall with elevation and slope, causing a decline in topsoil pH and a change from cation-rich clay soils of the Podocarpus-dominated forest at 2300 m a. s. l. (Mollic Nitisols/Typic Palehumults) to strongly-leached Humic Umbrisols/Humic Dystrudepts of the Hagenia-dominated forest around 2600 m a. s. l. The highland savannah plain (2700 m a. s. l.) with a drier and cooler environment has typically Mollic Cambisols/Dystric Haplustepts, which are less leached and have a rather brownish colour. At 2900 m a. s. l., Niti-umbric Alisols/Andic Hapludalfs are found in the Hypericum forest at the midslopes of the marginal volcanoes receiving high rainfall, whereas soil development is at a more initial state in the Erica-dominated forest at 3200 m a. s. l. (Umbric Andosols/Alic Hapludands). Clay mineral composition is kaolinite-dominated for the upper five profiles, with a high proportion of poorly crystalline components in the upper savannah and the volcano upslopes. The lowermost profile probably has a polygenetic origin indicated by an abrupt change from a smectitic to a kaolinitic composition in the subsoil. Soil development on quite homogeneous bedrock appears essentially controlled by relief and climate, underlining the suitability of the region as a model area for in-depth gradient studies on ecosystem processes and land use.

KW - Afromontane

KW - Carbon stocks

KW - Munessa Forest

KW - Nitrogen

KW - Soil fertility

KW - Sulfur

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DO - 10.1016/j.catena.2006.09.005

M3 - Article

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