Analysis of the sustainability within the composite swidden agroecosystem in northern Vietnam

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Composite swiddening is defined as an agroecosystem that integrates upland rotating crop/fallow plots and downstream permanent wet rice fields into a single household resource system. Analyses of partial N, P, K nutrient balances in upland fields were followed over a 5-year period in northern Vietnam comparing two shifting cultivation intensities (4-year rice (Oryza sativa)-rice-cassava-cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz), and 2-year rice-cassava cropping cycles) and a secondary forest. Nutrient inputs by forest burning, seeds, atmospheric deposition and output by erosion, runoff, leaching, rice straw burning and off-take in crop produce were determined. Burning of a 12-year fallow plot resulted in only moderate nutrient recycling via ashes and unburned plant materials (12.5, 2.8 and 29.8kgha super(-) super(1) of N, P, and K, respectively) but losses (off-take and atmospheric) from the field of 91, 82 and 70% of N, P, and K, respectively of nutrients contained in plant biomass. Economic yields of rice and cassava declined rapidly with successive cropping cycles. Average yearly atmospheric depositions amounted to 29, 7, and 37kgha super(-) super(1) of total N, P, and K, respectively. Yearly runoff and erosion (7-23Mgha super(-) super(1)year super(-) super(1)) were significantly higher from cropping systems than from secondary forest plots (0-3Mgha super(-) super(1)year super(-) super(1)). Yearly nutrient balances in the experimental upland fields were negative for total N, P, and K during the cropping period but on average positive for N (7kgha super(-) super(1)year super(-) super(1)) and P (4.1kgha super(-) super(1)year super(-) super(1)) in the secondary forest. In the more intensively managed upland fields about 139, 11, and 1600kgha super(-) super(1) of N, P, K, respectively were lost during 4 years of cropping, with less losses occurring in the 2-year cropping cycle. If nutrient losses from forest burning were also taken into account, the cumulative nutrient losses over 5 years were 247Nha super(-) super(1) and 23kgPha super(-) super(1) in the 4-year cropping system. The main pathway of total nutrient losses was erosion during cropping cycles but runoff during fallow periods. Soil analysis confirmed declining organic matter and N contents with increasing cropping cycles and partial recovery during fallow phases. It was estimated that fallows lasting up to 37 (incl. recovery of N losses from burning) years would be needed to restore N, and up to 6 years to restore P balances. With current fallow periods being mostly substantially shorter (about 4-6 years) the negative nutrient balances and soil erosion pose a serious threat to long-term sustainability of these upland fields. View source
Year

2008

Secondary Title

Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment

Publisher

Elsevier Science, The Boulevard Langford Lane Kidlington Oxford OX5 1GB UK, [mailto:nlinfo-f@elsevier.nl], [URL:http://www.elsevier.nl]

Volume

128

Number

1-2

Pages

37-51

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2008.05.004

Language

Keyword(s)

Ecology Abstracts, Pollution Abstracts, Sustainability Science Abstracts, Organic matter, Forests, plant biomass, Oryza sativa, Vietnam, Nutrients, Recycling, composite materials, Erosion, Economics, fallow land, Manihot esculenta, Crops, Pollutant deposition, nutrient loss, Leaching, sustainability, cultivation, Burning, Waste management, Oryza, Runoff, D 04040:Ecosystem and Ecology Studies, M3 1010:Issues in Sustainable Development, P 5000:LAND POLLUTION

Classification
Form: Journal Article
Geographical Area: Vietnam

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