Knowledge Center Catalog

Variation in vegetation cover and livestock mobility needs in Sahelian West Africa

Turner, M.D.

Variation in vegetation cover and livestock mobility needs in Sahelian West Africa - USA : Taylor & Francis, 2016.

Peer review

A new approach was developed to evaluate the implications of the spatiotemporal variability of green vegetation for the dispersion of livestock that is required to access quality forage in semi-arid Africa. Maximum NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) at 1 km2 resolution was determined for concentric rings (0–31 km radii) around 227 individual sample locations within the study area for 14 dates (between 1 April to 1 November) annually over the 2000–2010 period. A sigmoidal curve was fitted to points within the maximum NDVI × distance radii space to determine the asymptote distance (AD) – the radius at which further dispersion from the sample location does not lead to significant gains in access to green forage. AD was found to: increase with latitude (or increasing aridity); decline as the rainy season proceeds; and show no trend over the 2000–2010 period. These results introduce much-needed empirical data to current debates surrounding the scales of governance to support livestock mobility.




Text in English

1747-423X

https://doi.org/10.1080/1747423X.2014.965280


Ecology
Rangelands
Climate change


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