Ziban Dake

Ziban Dake is an exclosure located in the Dogu'a Tembien woreda of the Tigray Region in Ethiopia.[1]

Ziban Dake exclosure
Ziban Dake exclosure
LocationWalta (Dogu'a Tembien), Ethiopia
Nearest cityHagere Selam
Coordinates13.5°N 39.139°E / 13.5; 39.139
Area300 ha (740 acres)
Websitehttps://ethiotrees.com

Environmental characteristics[1]

  • Area: 300 ha
  • Average slope gradient: 43%
  • Aspect: the exclosure is oriented towards the south-southwest
  • Minimum altitude: 1702 metres
  • Maximum altitude: 1833 metres
  • Lithology: Antalo Limestone, Adigrat Sandstone
  • 2019: support by the EthioTrees project

Management

As a general rule, cattle ranging and wood harvesting are not allowed. The grasses are harvested once yearly and taken to the homesteads of the village to feed livestock. Field observations showed that some illegal grazing occurred in the exclosure in 2018. [1]

Benefits for the community

Setting aside such areas fits with the long-term vision of the communities were hiza’iti lands are set aside for use by the future generations. It has also direct benefits for the community[2]:

  • improved ground water availability
  • honey production
  • incense (oil) production
  • climate ameliorator (temperature, moisture)
  • the sequestered carbon (in total 34 tonnes per ha, dominantly sequestered in the soil, and additionally in the woody vegetation)[1] is certified using the Plan Vivo voluntary carbon standard,[3] after which carbon credits are sold
  • the revenues are then reinvested in the villages, according to the priorities of the communities; it may be for an additional class in the village school, a water pond, conservation in the exclosures, or a store for incense.[4]
Regeneration of vegetation at Ziban Dake

Biodiversity

With vegetation growth, biodiversity in this exclosure hast strongly improved: there is more varied vegetation and wildlife.

gollark: Problematic, though, considering.
gollark: Not currently. It could be, and it would be a fairly simple way to do it.
gollark: Probably the best approach to avoiding surveillance now would have to involve deliberately polluting facial recognition databases and such with fake pictures of you.
gollark: Just say that any data derived from stuff directly harvested from you is "yours".
gollark: It's easy enough *legally*.

References

  1. De Deyn, Jonathan (2019). Benefits of reforestation on Carbon storage and water infiltration in the context of climate mitigation in North Ethiopia. Master thesis, Ghent University.
  2. Jacob, M. and colleagues (2019). Exclosures as Primary Option for Reforestation in Dogu'a Tembien. In: Geo-trekking in Ethiopia's Tropical Mountains - The Dogu'a Tembien District. SpringerNature. ISBN 978-3-030-04954-6.
  3. EthioTrees on Plan Vivo website
  4. Reubens, B. and colleagues (2019). Research-based development projects in Dogu'a Tembien. In: Geo-trekking in Ethiopia's Tropical Mountains - The Dogu'a Tembien District. SpringerNature. ISBN 978-3-030-04954-6.
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