Resilience and Collapse in African Savannahs 2018
DOI: 10.4324/9781315267647-6
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Land-use changes and the invasion dynamics of shrubs in Baringo

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Building on decades of fieldwork in the area, on the systematic classification of satellite images, on data from interdisciplinary field research and on historical ecology, we are present a comprehensive analysis of LULCCs covering a period of 30 years and beyond. Our ethnographic data stretch from the late 1980s to the present (Bollig et al 2014;) and include recurrent interdisciplinary field campaigns with agronomists and botanists (Bollig and Schulte 1999;Greiner et al 2013;Becker et al 2016;Vehrs and Heller 2017). Our analysis also builds on studies based on remote sensing, which include time series of Landsat images for the period 1985 to 2015 (Obermaier 2013;Basukala et al 2019a, b).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Building on decades of fieldwork in the area, on the systematic classification of satellite images, on data from interdisciplinary field research and on historical ecology, we are present a comprehensive analysis of LULCCs covering a period of 30 years and beyond. Our ethnographic data stretch from the late 1980s to the present (Bollig et al 2014;) and include recurrent interdisciplinary field campaigns with agronomists and botanists (Bollig and Schulte 1999;Greiner et al 2013;Becker et al 2016;Vehrs and Heller 2017). Our analysis also builds on studies based on remote sensing, which include time series of Landsat images for the period 1985 to 2015 (Obermaier 2013;Basukala et al 2019a, b).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Lake Baringo basin lies immediately to the west of the Laikipia Plateau, extending over 6200 km 2 along the Rift Valley, and is characterised by bare soils, severe erosion, and invasive plants (Bessems et al 2008;Becker et al 2016). Though herding has been the dominant subsistence strategy for the past 3000 years, the intensity of pastoral occupation has fluctuated; this is apparent in the large number of sites associated with Pastoral Neolithic Turkwel ceramics (c. 200-1100 AD) coeval with a more arid period in the Lake Bogoria basin, and an almost complete lack of Pastoral Iron Age sites (c. 900-1700 AD) during the wetter Little Ice Age (c. 1250-1750) (Ashley et al 2004;De Cort et al 2013;Petek 2018).…”
Section: Case Study 2: Baringomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vegetation today is characterised by open bushland/woodland savannah dominated by Acacia spp. and increasingly by invasive forbs and shrubs (Becker et al 2016). Much of the land is bare causing severe sheet and gully erosion, making land degradation the dominant topic of current research (e.g.…”
Section: Baringo Before the Ilchamusmentioning
confidence: 99%