Rangeland degradation compromises farmers' income

'Livestock production has become expensive'
To ensure sustainable livestock production, farmers need to embark on rangeland rehabilitation and utilisation efforts, or regenerative farming practices.
Ellanie Smit
Rangeland degradation has compromised farm productivity and income as farmers tend to spend a significant amount of their earnings and efforts on rangeland rehabilitation and livestock feeding.
This is according to Agribank’s technical advisor for livestock and rangeland, Erastus Ngaruka, who said this, in turn, depletes their financial resources.
“Livestock production in many parts of Namibia has become expensive, and this is due to degraded rangelands.”
He said to ensure sustainable livestock production, farmers need to embark on rangeland rehabilitation and utilisation efforts, or regenerative farming practices.
These include conservative grazing regimes, controlling bush encroachment, soil erosion and rebuilding soil organic matter, rangeland re-vegetation and water conservation, among others.

Favourable conditions
Ngaruka said rangeland is defined as an area of land with natural forage materials that are utilised by livestock and wild animals, adding that its productivity depends on rainfall and utilisation.
Rangeland plants require favourable environmental conditions and protection for their establishment, distribution and resilience in agro-ecosystems or on livestock farming lands, he noted.
“In particular, the most important attributes about rangeland productivity in grazing areas are grass vigour, density, species composition and abundance or richness, among others.”
Ngaruka said these attributes indicate the resilience of grass growth after dormancy and grazing, the grass yield per unit area, the different grass species, and their dominance.
According to him, these are indicators of grazing values in the different rangelands, and are influenced by climatic conditions and utilisation, varying in spatial and temporal scales.

Cheapest source
The rangeland is the main and cheapest source of food for livestock, he said. “Moreover, humans derive very useful resources from it.”
These include medicinal plants, edible plant products, household materials such as timber, poles, droppers and thatching grass.
Ngaruka highlighted that rangeland therefore supports all forms of life, hence there is competition for rangeland resources between animals and humans.
This has placed many rangelands under pressure to the extent that their productive potential is compromised, thus degrading them.
According to him, in Namibia, rangeland degradation is conspicuous at various scales in varying landscapes, and takes the form of deforestation, desertification, soil erosion and bush encroachment.
“The increasing human population, developmental activities, climate change as well as the demand for livestock and their products continue to put pressure on rangelands.”
Ngaruka added that deforestation activities are rampant especially in rural or farming areas as a result of construction, mining activities, timber harvesting and land clearing for cropping purposes.
These activities result in the removal of valuable plants, local extinction of native plants and loss of biodiversity, he noted. Furthermore, deforestation together with overgrazing leads to desertification, where soils become bare and exposed to extreme desert-like conditions such as high temperatures, where only a few or no plant species can withstand such conditions.
Bare or exposed soils lose their stability as there is no plant to protect them against erosion activities and trampling.
Wind and water erosion remove the topsoil, seeds and organic matter. In addition, erosion results in surface capping, water run-off, excessive evaporation, and soil dehydration.
Any change in the rangeland condition will change the farmer’s livelihood in the same way, Ngaruka said.