Spatial variability of herbage yield, grazing capacity and plant diversity in a tropical savannah rangeland ecosystem
Date
2023
Authors
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Publisher
African Journal of Range & Forage Science
Abstract
To improve ruminant livestock production, evaluation of rangelands must be a routine. Rangeland evaluation gives
information about the vegetation structure, biomass yield and quality. The Guinea savannah rangelands of Ghana
lack research that characterises the spatial variability of herbage yield and quality. It was hypothesised that there
is spatial heterogeneity in herbage yield, grazing capacity and plant diversity in the Guinea savannah rangelands
of Ghana. The objective was to evaluate the spatial structure of herbage production and grazing capacity in the
Guinea savannah rangelands of Ghana for sustainable livestock production. Data were collected from 105 sampling
sites and integrated into geo-statistics, using ordinary kriging interpolation to generate herbage yield and grazing
capacity estimates. Herbage yield and grazing capacity ranged from 0.63 t ha−1 to 13.43 t ha−1 and 0.18 LU ha−1 to
3.79 LU ha−1 respectively. The root mean square error and the average standard error values were close (2.38 and
2.51 respectively for herbage yield and 0.67 and 0.71 respectively for grazing capacity). Species diversity using
the Shannon’s index ranged from 1.13 to 2.40. There was spatial heterogeneity in herbage yield, grazing capacity
and species diversity in Ghana’s Guinea savannah rangelands with some parts needing effective site-specific
improvement strategies for sustainable livestock production.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
dry matter yield, dominant grass species, Guinea savannah, Kriging