Recruitment and survival of native annual Trifolium species in the highlands of Ethiopia
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Date
2003-12-01
Date Issued
1997-03-01
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 0.713 (Year: 2003)
Citation
D. Dauro, M. A. Mohamed Saleem, Gustave Gintzburger. (1/12/2003). Recruitment and survival of native annual Trifolium species in the highlands of Ethiopia. African Journal of Ecology, 35 (1), pp. 1-9.
Abstract
Germination and survival of indigenous annual Trifolium species were studied. Seedlings naturally emerging in the held and from sown seeds in pots were regularly counted and uprooted, and survival was studied by monitoring colour-coded seedlings. Differences in recruitment of Trifolium species were strongly related to the rainfall pattern. In the fallow (crop) lands, no seedling survived the dry season between the short and main rainy periods during the year, while in the natural pasture, 8% of the seedlings survived into the main growing (rainy) season. Occasional rains occurring in the dry period (between the two rainy periods) also induced successions of germination and seedlings death, and therefore depleted the soft seed reserve in the soil by the beginning of the main growing season. As temperature fluctuations were minimal during the main rainy season, the rate of seed softening was low, affecting new germinations. This had a significant impact on the quality of the natural pastures on which livestock in the highlands are dependent.