Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana

Abstract Soil erosion is a threat to the viability of arable land, which has a relationship with crop productivity. This study was carried out in the Northern, North-East and Savannah Regions of Ghana, which have a high agricultural potential. The study examined erosion-yield relationship by comp...

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Main Authors: Wilson Agyei Agyare, Eliasu Salifu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Politeknik Negeri Batam 2021-09-01
Series:Journal of Applied Geospatial Information
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.polibatam.ac.id/index.php/JAGI/article/view/3271
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spelling doaj-54bbe3be1ec24dc2a0e73fc9fc11b46f2021-09-08T08:31:30ZengPoliteknik Negeri BatamJournal of Applied Geospatial Information2579-36082021-09-015248649310.30871/jagi.v5i2.32713271Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern GhanaWilson Agyei AgyareEliasu SalifuAbstract Soil erosion is a threat to the viability of arable land, which has a relationship with crop productivity. This study was carried out in the Northern, North-East and Savannah Regions of Ghana, which have a high agricultural potential. The study examined erosion-yield relationship by comparing estimated erosion rates with maize and groundnut yields in a GIS environment. The study also projected soil erosion and determined its potential effect on the yield of maize and groundnuts. The soil erosion rates were found to be 4.2 t ha-1y-1, 5.1 t ha-1y-1 and 7.1 t ha-1y-1 for the Northern, North-East and Savannah Regions respectively. Projections for the next 10 years showed that, soil erosion will averagely increase by about 12 %, which could reduce the yield of maize and groundnut by 21 % and 16 % respectively by the year 2031, should the current trend continue. The study also found out that crop (maize and groundnut) yield per land area is relatively lower in areas severely affected by soil erosion. Farmers in the study area and areas of similar ecology must be encouraged to adopt Soil and Water Conservation (SWC) strategies to enhance and sustain productivity.https://jurnal.polibatam.ac.id/index.php/JAGI/article/view/3271rusle, northern region, north-east region, savannah region
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wilson Agyei Agyare
Eliasu Salifu
spellingShingle Wilson Agyei Agyare
Eliasu Salifu
Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
Journal of Applied Geospatial Information
rusle, northern region, north-east region, savannah region
author_facet Wilson Agyei Agyare
Eliasu Salifu
author_sort Wilson Agyei Agyare
title Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
title_short Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
title_full Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
title_fullStr Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Spatiotemporal Analysis of Potential Impact of Soil Erosion on Maize and Groundnuts Yield in Northern Ghana
title_sort spatiotemporal analysis of potential impact of soil erosion on maize and groundnuts yield in northern ghana
publisher Politeknik Negeri Batam
series Journal of Applied Geospatial Information
issn 2579-3608
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Soil erosion is a threat to the viability of arable land, which has a relationship with crop productivity. This study was carried out in the Northern, North-East and Savannah Regions of Ghana, which have a high agricultural potential. The study examined erosion-yield relationship by comparing estimated erosion rates with maize and groundnut yields in a GIS environment. The study also projected soil erosion and determined its potential effect on the yield of maize and groundnuts. The soil erosion rates were found to be 4.2 t ha-1y-1, 5.1 t ha-1y-1 and 7.1 t ha-1y-1 for the Northern, North-East and Savannah Regions respectively. Projections for the next 10 years showed that, soil erosion will averagely increase by about 12 %, which could reduce the yield of maize and groundnut by 21 % and 16 % respectively by the year 2031, should the current trend continue. The study also found out that crop (maize and groundnut) yield per land area is relatively lower in areas severely affected by soil erosion. Farmers in the study area and areas of similar ecology must be encouraged to adopt Soil and Water Conservation (SWC) strategies to enhance and sustain productivity.
topic rusle, northern region, north-east region, savannah region
url https://jurnal.polibatam.ac.id/index.php/JAGI/article/view/3271
work_keys_str_mv AT wilsonagyeiagyare spatiotemporalanalysisofpotentialimpactofsoilerosiononmaizeandgroundnutsyieldinnorthernghana
AT eliasusalifu spatiotemporalanalysisofpotentialimpactofsoilerosiononmaizeandgroundnutsyieldinnorthernghana
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