Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.

Echinochloa stagnina growing in Lake Kainji is identified, described, and separated from Echinochloa pyramidalis and Echinochloa colonaa. The grass has been recognized by cattle farmers as an important source of dry-season fodder for their stock, while the power generation authorities view it as a...

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מחבר ראשי: Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo
מחברים אחרים: Sanford., W.W.
פורמט: Thesis
שפה:אנגלית
יצא לאור: Obafemi Awolowo University 2014
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author Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo
author2 Sanford., W.W.
author_facet Sanford., W.W.
Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo
author_sort Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo
collection DSpace
description Echinochloa stagnina growing in Lake Kainji is identified, described, and separated from Echinochloa pyramidalis and Echinochloa colonaa. The grass has been recognized by cattle farmers as an important source of dry-season fodder for their stock, while the power generation authorities view it as a problem to the Lake's hydrology and optimal power generation due to its contributions to water loss from the lake through evapo-transpiration. Echinochloa stagnina which requires the annual 10 m draw-down of the lake for successful establishment and survival, shows a marked zonation and can potentially cover up to 46% of the lake's surface area. The contribution of the grass to evapotranspirational water loss from the lake accounts for the reduction of the effective lake volume by up to 17%, for example in 1979. A management strategy which demands the harvest and removal, for livestock fodder, of 5% of the total yearly standing crop (up to 120,965.4 tonnes) in order to maintain the grass as a renewable source of dry season fodder without significantly affecting power generation is presented. With such removal an estimated 3 x 106 kg of nitrogen and 4 x 105 kg phosphorus are removable from the lake ecosystem. Sources of nutrients to balance these removals are discussed. Decomposition of Echinochloa stagnina litter in Lake Kainji is rapid and does not fit the general exponential model Wt Woe`-t where Wt is the weight of litter left after time t , W0 is the original weight of litter, k is the decay coefficient and e is the base of the natural logarithm. A mathematical model, the Kainji Lake Echinochloa Model, to calculate the area colonizable by emergent vegetation any given year once the upper and lower water levels of the previous year is known, is presented and tested. A current vegetation map of the Lake is presented; the model has been used to reconstruct the vegetation cover history of the lake.
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spelling oai:ir.oauife.edu.ng:123456789-34302023-05-13T11:10:11Z Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria. Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo Sanford., W.W. Lake Kainji Echinochloa stagnina vegetation cattle evapo-transpiration zonation decomposition hydrology Echinochloa stagnina growing in Lake Kainji is identified, described, and separated from Echinochloa pyramidalis and Echinochloa colonaa. The grass has been recognized by cattle farmers as an important source of dry-season fodder for their stock, while the power generation authorities view it as a problem to the Lake's hydrology and optimal power generation due to its contributions to water loss from the lake through evapo-transpiration. Echinochloa stagnina which requires the annual 10 m draw-down of the lake for successful establishment and survival, shows a marked zonation and can potentially cover up to 46% of the lake's surface area. The contribution of the grass to evapotranspirational water loss from the lake accounts for the reduction of the effective lake volume by up to 17%, for example in 1979. A management strategy which demands the harvest and removal, for livestock fodder, of 5% of the total yearly standing crop (up to 120,965.4 tonnes) in order to maintain the grass as a renewable source of dry season fodder without significantly affecting power generation is presented. With such removal an estimated 3 x 106 kg of nitrogen and 4 x 105 kg phosphorus are removable from the lake ecosystem. Sources of nutrients to balance these removals are discussed. Decomposition of Echinochloa stagnina litter in Lake Kainji is rapid and does not fit the general exponential model Wt Woe`-t where Wt is the weight of litter left after time t , W0 is the original weight of litter, k is the decay coefficient and e is the base of the natural logarithm. A mathematical model, the Kainji Lake Echinochloa Model, to calculate the area colonizable by emergent vegetation any given year once the upper and lower water levels of the previous year is known, is presented and tested. A current vegetation map of the Lake is presented; the model has been used to reconstruct the vegetation cover history of the lake. 2014-08-25T10:28:45Z 2018-10-29T11:06:55Z 2014-08-25T10:28:45Z 2018-10-29T11:06:55Z 1985 Thesis APA http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3430 en pdf application/pdf Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria Obafemi Awolowo University
spellingShingle Lake Kainji
Echinochloa stagnina
vegetation
cattle
evapo-transpiration
zonation
decomposition
hydrology
Obot, Emmanuel Asuquo
Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title_full Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title_fullStr Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title_full_unstemmed Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title_short Studies on the Productivity of Echinochloa Stagnina (Retz) P. Beauv. in the Kanji Lake Basin of Northern Nigeria.
title_sort studies on the productivity of echinochloa stagnina retz p beauv in the kanji lake basin of northern nigeria
topic Lake Kainji
Echinochloa stagnina
vegetation
cattle
evapo-transpiration
zonation
decomposition
hydrology
url http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3430
work_keys_str_mv AT obotemmanuelasuquo studiesontheproductivityofechinochloastagninaretzpbeauvinthekanjilakebasinofnorthernnigeria