scholarly journals Effects of land use on soil degradation in Giriwoyo, Wonogiri, Indonesia

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 3063-3072
Author(s):  
M Mujiyo ◽  
Tiara Hardian ◽  
Hery Widijanto ◽  
Aktavia Herawati

This study aimed at determining the effect of land use on soil degradation, discovering the indicator as a determinant factor of soil degradation, and providing recommendations for land management to improve soil productivity. This study was conducted in agricultural lands in Giriwoyo, Wonogiri, Indonesia, and the observation indicator adopted by the Indonesian Government Regulation concerning Soil Degradation Control for Biomass Production. The methodology used was survey research with purposive sampling points in 12 land mapping units, and each unit was represented three times. The result showed that the study area was slightly and moderately degraded. Land use significantly affected soil degradation, and the paddy field has the highest degradation in the study area. Soil characteristics as degradation factors in the study area were soil texture, bulk density, and total porosity. Strategy for land management can be made by limiting the use of chemical fertilizers, and changing the use of chemical fertilizers into compost, to increase soil organic content, and accelerate the availability of nutrients.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hadi Arnowo

ABSTRACT The goal of establishing a land bank in Indonesia has been initiated with the issuance of Government Regulation Number 64 of 2021 concerning Land Bank Agency. Based on this regulation, the Land Bank Agency has the function of channeling land assets owned to achieve a fair economy. The purpose of this study is to create an appropriate model for the Land Bank Agency to manage the usage and distribution of land assets. This study used a descriptive qualitative research with normative legal methods. This methods is a descriptions of the arguments collection that used in the formation of governance, mechanisms for the utilization and distribution of Land Bank assets. The results of this study are in the form of a description of the flow of land bank asset management, the mechanism for utilizing and distributing land assets. Management of land assets controlled by the Land Bank is generally managed for office facilities, sources of income and land distribution. Management of land assets for office needs and land distribution needs is non-commercial. Meanwhile, the management for the source of income is commercial. The income earned is used to finance operational activities and capital development. The Land Bank can make use of land assets alone or in cooperation with other parties according to the agreement. Land assets that have been granted Management Rights can be used alone and distributed and can be utilized in cooperation with other parties. Meanwhile, land that has not been granted a Management Right can only be used alone for operational needs or for distribution. The distribution of land must be based on planning documents with transparent and accountable criteria and priority scales so as not to cause problems in the future and on target. Keywords: Land Management, Land Use, Land Distribution ABSTRAK Cita-cita pembentukan bank tanah di Indonesia telah terwujud dengan terbitnya Peraturan Pemerintah Nomor 64 Tahun 2021 tentang Badan Bank Tanah. Berdasarkan peraturan tersebut Badan Bank Tanah mempunyai fungsi untuk menyalurkan aset tanah yang dimiliki untuk mewujudkan ekonomi berkeadilan. Tujuan penelitian ini adalah untuk membuat model yang tepat bagi Badan Bank Tanah dalam mengelola aset tanah yang akan dimanfaatkan dan didistribusikan. Karya tulis ilmiah ini berupa penelitian yang bersifat kualitatif deskriptif dengan metode hukum normatif. Metode ini merupakan kumpulan deskripsi dari argumen-argumen yang dibutuhkan dalam pembentukan tata kelola, mekanisme pemanfaatan dan pendistribusian aset Bank Tanah. Hasil kajian ini berupa deskripsi mengenai alur pengelolaan aset Bank Tanah dan mekanisme pemanfaatan serta pendistribusian aset tanah. Pengelolaan aset tanah yang dikuasai Bank Tanah secara umum dikelola untuk sarana kantor, sumber pendapatan dan didistribusikan. Pengelolaan aset tanah untuk kebutuhan perkantoran dan kebutuhan pendistribusian bersifat non komersial. Sedangkan pengelolaan untuk sumber pendapatan bersifat komersial. Pendapatan yang diperoleh secara langsung sebagai modal penyertaan dari pemerintah digunakan untuk pembiayaan operasional Bank Tanah dan pengembangan modal. Pemanfaatan aset tanah dapat dilakukan sendiri oleh Bank Tanah atau melalui kerja sama dengan pihak lain sesuai perjanjian. Aset tanah yang telah diberikan Hak Pengelolaan dapat digunakan sendiri atau didistribusikan serta dapat dimanfaatkan melalui kerja sama dengan pihak lain. Sedangkan tanah yang belum diberikan Hak Pengelolaan hanya dapat digunakan sendiri untuk kebutuhan operasional atau untuk didistribusikan. Pendistribusian tanah harus berdasarkan dokumen perencanaan dengan kriteria dan skala prioritas yang transparan dan akuntabel agar tidak menimbulkan masalah di kemudian hari dan tepat sasaran. Kata Kunci: Pengelolaan Tanah, Pemanfaatan Tanah, Pendistribusian Tanah


Author(s):  
Yohannes Habteyesus Yitagesu ◽  

Sustainable land management has emerged as an issue of major global concern. In many countries particularly in Ethiopia, the concern of suitable land management is because of the increasing population pressure on limited land resources, demanding for increased food production, the degradation of land and water resources accelerating rapidly. If the lands well suited for agriculture, it will follows further increases in production to meet the food demands of increasing populations, must come about by the more intensive use of existing agricultural lands. Climate & soil conditions, land use type and management, determine the production limit.To contest cited venomous effects of intensification, regard to environmental effects requires the development and implementation of technologies and policies, which will result in sustainable land management (Gisla-dottir and Stocking, 2005; Campbell and Hagmann, 2003). The major factors reason for low productivity include dependence on traditional farming techniques, soil degradation caused by overgrazing and deforestation, poor corresponding services such as extension, credit, marketing, infrastructure, and climatic factors such as drought and flood (Deressa, Hassan, & Ringler, 2011). In addition to the low soil fertility, soil degradation in Ethiopia; reduces soil productivity which results to food insecurity, economic losses and aggravates the recurrent droughts (Shiferaw & Holden, 1999; Mitiku et al., 2006). It has also increases vulnerability of people to the adverse effects of climate variability and change, by reducing soil organic carbon level and water holding capacity, which in turn decreases agricultural productivity and local resource assets (TerrAfrica, 2009; Nyssen et. al., 2003a; Hurni, 2000; Mitiku Haile,2006 & Daniel et al., 2015). Climate change causes wide-ranging effects on the environment, socioeconomic and associated sectors: water resources, agriculture and food security, human health, terrestrial ecosystems, and biodiversity (Belay Zerga & Getaneh Gebeyehu, 2016). Ethiopia is extremely vulnerable to climate related disasters including drought, heavy rains, floods, frost and heat waves which leads to a negative impacts on agriculture, food security, rural livelihoods, and economic development (NMA 2007). Planning of changes in land use requires a inclusive knowledge of the natural resources; a trustworthy estimate of what they are capable of producing, so that reliable predictions and recommendations can be made. Production potential, the conservation of soil and water resources for use by future generations requires consideration in planning land development. For these reasons sustainable land management is now getting considerable attention from development experts, policy makers and researchers. In long-term period, any utilization over its capability of the land will cause degradation and yield reduction. Therefore, to know the land production capacity and to allocate the land to the satisfactory and to the most profitable should be cared.


Author(s):  
Apriani Widiatiningsih ◽  
Mujiyo Mujiyo ◽  
Suntoro Suntoro

This study is aimed to evaluate soil degradation based on Standard Criteria of Soil Degradation for Biomass Production under Indonesian Government Regulation No. 150 in 2000. Conducted at Jatipurno District, Keduang Sub-Watersheds, between October and December 2016, at seven selected land units, each land unit is represented by four sample points. The selection of sampling area is according to Stratified Purposive Sampling method. The evaluation of soil degradation is carried out by determining the threshold value and key factors of soil characteristics based on the Standard Criteria of Soil (matching process), which lead to degradation. The results showed that the entire soil at Jatipurno District is slightly degraded. The most extensive soil degradation 2,869.31 ha area (69.60%) is caused by a low colloid fraction, high bulk density, low total porosity and low soil permeability. The soil degradation mostly caused by low soil permeability which the number is under critical threshold &lt; 0.7 cm hour<sup>-1</sup> in the entire land units. Implementing providing organic matter to the soil, planting variations of cover crops, on land plots (low, medium, high cover crops), land management by crop rotation and intercropping, minimum tillage in accordance with the rules of environmental conservation, can be done to minimize the soil degradation.


2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (1s) ◽  
pp. 33-37
Author(s):  
V. Makarenko ◽  
◽  
G. Ruecker ◽  
R. Sommer ◽  
N. Djanibekov ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Olha Dorosh ◽  
Iryna Kupriyanchik ◽  
Denys Melnyk

The land and town planning legislation concerning the planning of land use development within the united territorial communities (UTC) is considered. It is found that legislative norms need to be finalized. The necessity of updating the existing land management documentation developed prior to the adoption of the Law of Ukraine "On Land Management" and changes in the structure of urban development in connection with the adoption of the Law of Ukraine "On Regulation of Urban Development" was proved as they do not ensure the integrity of the planning process within the territories of these communities through their institutional incapacity (proved by the example of the Palan Unified Territorial Community of the Uman district of the Cherkasy region). The priority of land management and urban planning documents as the most influential tools in planning the development of land use systems in UTC is scientifically grounded and their interdependence established.


Author(s):  
Hildegarde Vandenhove

The accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant has raised questions about the accumulation of radionuclides in soils, the transfer in the foodchain and the possibility of continued restricted future land use. This paper summarizes what is generally understood about the application of agricultural countermeasures as a land management option to reduce the radionuclides transfer in the food chain and to facilitate the return of potentially affected soils to agricultural practices in areas impacted by a nuclear accident.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (66) ◽  
pp. 204-208
Author(s):  
Victor D. Postolov ◽  
◽  
Larisa V. Bryantseva ◽  
Keyword(s):  
Land Use ◽  

2002 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 827-841 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bredemeier

The focus in this review of long-term effects on forest ecosystems is on human impact. As a classification of this differentiated and complex matter, three domains of long-term effects with different scales in space and time are distinguished: 1- Exploitation and conversion history of forests in areas of extended human settlement 2- Long-range air pollution and acid deposition in industrialized regions 3- Current global loss of forests and soil degradation.There is an evident link between the first and the third point in the list. Cultivation of primary forestland — with its tremendous effects on land cover — took place in Europe many centuries ago and continued for centuries. Deforestation today is a phenomenon predominantly observed in the developing countries, yet it threatens biotic and soil resources on a global scale. Acidification of forest soils caused by long-range air pollution from anthropogenic emission sources is a regional to continental problem in industrialized parts of the world. As a result of emission reduction legislation, atmospheric acid deposition is currently on the retreat in the richer industrialized regions (e.g., Europe, U.S., Japan); however, because many other regions of the world are at present rapidly developing their polluting industries (e.g., China and India), “acid rain” will most probably remain a serious ecological problem on regional scales. It is believed to have caused considerable destabilization of forest ecosystems, adding to the strong structural and biogeochemical impacts resulting from exploitation history.Deforestation and soil degradation cause the most pressing ecological problems for the time being, at least on the global scale. In many of those regions where loss of forests and soils is now high, it may be extremely difficult or impossible to restore forest ecosystems and soil productivity. Moreover, the driving forces, which are predominantly of a demographic and socioeconomic nature, do not yet seem to be lessening in strength. It can only be hoped that a wise policy of international cooperation and shared aims can cope with this problem in the future.


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