SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF SOIL-SALINITY AT DIFFERENT SCALES IN THE MANGROVE RICE AGROECOSYSTEM IN WEST-AFRICA

Citation
M. Sylla et al., SPATIAL VARIABILITY OF SOIL-SALINITY AT DIFFERENT SCALES IN THE MANGROVE RICE AGROECOSYSTEM IN WEST-AFRICA, Agriculture, ecosystems & environment, 54(1-2), 1995, pp. 1-15
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture,"Environmental Sciences
ISSN journal
01678809
Volume
54
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1 - 15
Database
ISI
SICI code
0167-8809(1995)54:1-2<1:SVOSAD>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Spatial variability of soil salinity in coastal low lands results from a complex interaction of climate, river hydrology, topography and tid al flooding. The aim of this study was to determine the significant ef fects of these causal factors at different scales in the West African mangrove environment. The driving forces are the penetration of tidal saline waters and subsequent water evaporation in the flood plain, of which the magnitude is controlled by the causal factors. A hierarchica l framework of the different factors was designed. Four river basins w ere selected: the Gambia, the Casamance (Senegal), the Geba (Guinea Bi ssau) and the Great Scarcies (Sierra Leone). Within each river basin, three strips of land (80 m wide, 500 to 1800 m long), perpendicular to the river at different distances from the mouth, were selected. In th e dry season of 1991, soil samples were taken from the strips using a 40 m x 20 m grid at five soil depths to be analyzed for salinity. The contribution of the different sources to salinity spatial variability was analyzed with a nested ANOVA. Geostatistics were used to model spa tial variability at micro-scale. As a result, main environments at mac ro scale (between river basins), sub-environments at meso scale (withi n river basins) and salinity classes at micro scale (within catena) we re defined. Nested regression and geostatistics were found complementa ry to disentangle the complexity of the factors influencing salinity s patial variability.