Wind protection in a hedged agroforestry system in semiarid Kenya
Date
2000Author
OTENG'I, S. B. B.
STIGTER, C. J.
NG'ANG'A, J. K.
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Abstract, In semiarid Laikipia (Kenya) severe crop damage and loss of mulch material may be
caused by south to south-easterly winds from June to September. Demonstration agroforestry
systems which surround farms with live fences had some success in protecting crops, mulch
and soil, but great care must be taken, because air may be channelled through or over them.
For demonstration purposes, a deliberate gap was made in a two meter high Coleus barbatus
live fence to study its effect on wind speed and damage to crops. The effectiveness of protection
given by this hedge together with intercropped Grevillea robusta trees was quantified using
electrical cup anemometers. The combination of hedges and trees gave protection to a maizeibean
intercrop but the biomass distribution was not the most suitable one. This picture was complicated
by variable wind direction and interactions between wind and the biomass of hedges and
trees. The lowest efficiency of wind reduction occurred closest to the deliberate gap, where
also the lowest protection by the Grevillea trees was found. South to south-easterly winds
increased the gap effect and caused gradients in tree protection perpendicular to the southern
hedge. This gave at times wind speeds even higher than outside the system. Only visually wind
effects could be detected. Trees and hedges strongly competed with the crops if not root pruned.
Publisher
University of Nairobi Department of Meteorology