Explaining desertification di Simona Gili

PRINCIPLES CAUSES


Lands degradation causes a reduction of economical and biological production, of the complexity of vegetation, of grazing, of the forest, by soil use, and some processes like water and wind erosion, soil alteration, destruction of vegetable soil cover.
In Europe degraded areas have increased of 40% between 1900 and 1970, because of an irrational use of arid or sub arid lands; bad agricultural practices, overgrazing, deforestation, fires [ES1] and large urbanization have quadruplicated desertification. Furthermore, human activities increase has produced a reduction of resilience of arid land’s ecosystem.

Today it seems that principles causes [E2] [ES1] [ES2] could be:

* drought and desiccation

* human activities

* overgrazing

* deforestation

* overcultivation

* poor irrigation practices

* soil erosion and salinisation

Drought and desiccation [E2] [F1] [F2]

It is protracted rainfall failure. Its duration is usually short-term, one to two years. In ecological terms, it is a dry period from which an ecosystem often recovers rapidly after the rains return.

This kind of ecosystem is called dryland: drylands have limited freshwater supplies. Precipitation can vary greatly during the year. In addition to this seasonal variability, wide fluctuations occur over years and decades, frequently leading to drought. Over the ages, dryland ecology has become attuned to this variability in moisture; plants and animals can respond to it rapidly. For example, satellite imagine has shown that the vegetation boundary south of the Sahara can move by up to 200 km when a wet year is followed by a dry one, and vice versa.

The biological and economic resources of drylands, notably soil quality, freshwater supplies [F1] [ES1] [ES2], vegetation, and crops, are easily damaged. Drought is the most serious physical hazard to agriculture in nearly every part of the world. People have learned to protect these resources with age-old strategies such as shifting agriculture and nomadic herding. However, in recent decades these strategies have become less practical due to changing economic and political circumstances, population growth, and a trend towards more settled communities. When land managers cannot or do not respond flexibly to climate variations, desertification is the result.

Desiccation is a process of aridification resulting from a dry period lasting in the order of decades. The main difference with drought is above all its long term.

In many country of the world man continuously combats drought and desiccation: in Australia, in USA, in Pakistan, in Canada [F1], in France and Sahel, in Tunisia, in Burkina Faso, in Morocco, in Brazil, in China, in Italy, in Senegal, in Nigeria, in Swaziland.

Human activities

The most commonly cited forms of unsustainable land use are over-cultivation, overgrazing, deforestation, poor irrigation practices and any other inappropriate land use and human management of ecosystems.

Perhaps the most important cause of environmental degradation is the rapidly increasing human and animal population pressure, leading to overexploitation of and intensified stresses on the natural resources. The human population in Africa's ASAL (arid and semi arid lands) has doubled in the past three decades to nearly 400 million and continues to expand at a rate of three percent a year. This means that the ASAL's natural resources must feed an additional 12 million people every year, good weather or bad.

Besides, scientists from the Earth Environment Research Institute, under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, have declared that human activities have driven the desert in north China [E2] [F1] [F2] [ES] southward by approximately 300 kilometers over the past 3,000 years.

Today scientists assert the importance of physical geographical conditions and climatic variation as conditions to cause desertification, but the desertification process is slow. Human activities have certainly accelerated and promoted the desertification processes as the leading factors to cause desertification. Probably international economic forces can encourage people to overexploit their land. In fact international trade patterns can lead to the short-term exploitation of local resources for export, leaving little profit at the community level for managing or restoring the land. Similarly, the development of an economy based on cash crops, or the imposition of taxes, can distort local markets and promote overexploitation of the land. Ignorance, errors, and natural and man-made disasters can also contribute to land degradation. Disasters such as wars and national emergencies also destroy productive land by displacing its managers or causing heavy concentrations of migrants to overburden an area.

It is important to underline that an expanding human population [E2] is the ultimate driving force behind desertification. More people in an area inevitably exert a greater pressure on that area's resources.

But the causes of desertification are complex, and the relationship between two variables such as population and desertification is not so clear. For example, a decline in population can result in desertification since there may no longer be enough people to manage the land adequately. Many hillside terraces in Yemen have fallen into disrepair with the exodus of labour to neighbouring oil-rich countries. Examples can also be cited of areas that support large concentrations of people without much degradation, such as around the city of Kano in Nigeria.

Overgrazing is the exhaustion of land and pasture resources by continuous grazing [E2] of animals. It results in weakened forage plants with reduced root system and lower forage yield, increased soil erosion, water runoff and weeds. Consequently to the growing of population, the extension of subsistence farming and marginal grazing activities are going to cover larger proportions of the region. Besides there is an increase of fuel wood collection by the population and consequently an increase in deforestation.

Overgrazing has made the Rio Puerco Basin of central New Mexico one of the most eroded river basins of the American West and has increased the high sediment content of the river.

Deforestation [E1] [E2] [F1] is the permanent destruction of indigenous forests [F1] and woodlands. One of the primary causes of deforestation in Africa is that population growth has rendered traditional patterns of agriculture unsustainable. These include the practice in parts of Southern and Central Africa of shifting cultivation to newly cleared land after several seasons, increasing the need for cleared land and putting excessive strain on Africa's forest resources. In Madagascar and parts of Central Africa, slash-and-burn agricultural practices are also contributing to the problem of deforestation

Unless stewardship practices are changed, Africa's food and fuel security will be threatened, and erosion, land degradation and desertification will become even more pressing realities.

Today many environmental organizations think that with the actual deforestation there won’t be more indigenous forest in Africa from 5 to 10 years.

Poor irrigation practices and overcultivation

Water [E2] [ES1] [ES2] [F1] [F2] is a scarce resource and best management practices must be applied when irrigating crops, to conserve water and sustain the environment.
Really, we can say that it is not completely true that Africa hasn’t water: Africa hasn’t enough clean, safe, drinkable water.
What would cause this? How could a regional area with enough water be having a shortage, not with water, but clean drinkable water?
There are several main reasons why North Africa is having a shortage of drinkable water: agriculture, that leads to salinisation of the soil, pollution, caused by waste management and industrial waste, water management [E2], it contributes to there being a shortage and the improper use of the little water that these countries have left. The water management is unorganized and inefficient.
The use of agricultural fertilizers, pesticides, contaminates groundwater, aquifers, and surface waters.
Finally there’s another important cause of the inability of african water: the pollution caused by the presence of too many sediments coming from mountains, that are today more erodible consequently of the soil erosion.

Soil erosion

Drought, desertification, overcultivation, overgrazing and human activities lead to the soil erosion [E2] [E3] [E4] [E5] [ES1] this is a key problem because soil is a non-renewable resource. For nature to form a layer of top-soil thick enough to support plant life takes thousands of years. Through human misuse, the layer can be destroyed in a few decades, or in a few years. Once eroded, its loss is permanent.

Some arid and semi-arid lands can support crops, but additional pressure from greater populations or decreases in rainfall can lead to the few plants present disappearing. The soil becomes exposed to wind, causing soil particles to be deposited elsewhere. The top layer becomes eroded. With the removal of shade, rates of evaporation increase and salts become drawn up to the surface. This is salinisation, and inhibits plant growth. The loss of plants causes less moisture to be retained in the area, which may change the climate pattern leading to lower rainfall.

Fragile soils are being degraded through improper cultivation practices, fuel wood cutting leading to deforestation, and overgrazing destroying the ground cover over large areas.

Soil can be eroded away by wind and water. High winds can blow away loose soils from flat or hilly terrain.

Water erosion generally occurs only on slopes, and its severity increases with the severity of the slope. In many parts of the world much of the wind erosion occurs in winter when the ground is frozen, but the upper most soil layer is dry and loose. Water erosion occurs during the spring with the thawing and melting action of the snow.

Activity Two: Exploring Causes

- Make a discussion on the question: “What are the causes of desertification?”
Natural causes:
* Drought
* Wind
Human activities:
* Deforestation
* Reclamation
- Make with the class a chart of the causes
- Discuss and give oral answers

- Continue with activity one:
have each group member choose an area the group has identified and research and evaluate possible causes for desertification, such as degradation of natural resources, global climate changes, effects of economic development, and other possible factors.
Challenge students to create model action plans that could combat desertification or promote rehabilitation in an at-risk area they choose. Before the groups begin their plans, remind students that because ecological processes such as desertification override boundaries between nations, a high degree of international cooperation is necessary to combat the problem.

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