THE COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF SAMBRET ESTATE

dc.bibliographicCitation.endpage54en
dc.bibliographicCitation.issueSpecial Issue 1979en
dc.bibliographicCitation.stpage51en
dc.bibliographicCitation.titleEast African Agricultural And Forestry Journalen
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume43en
dc.contributor.authorMonkhouse A.J.Wnull
dc.contributor.corpauthorBrooke Bond Leibig (Kenya) Limitednull
dc.date.accessioned2015-06-19T12:21:41Znull
dc.date.available2015-06-19T12:21:41Znull
dc.date.issued1979en
dc.description.abstractAfter The second world war agricultural production of many crops and of tea in particular expanded rapidly in east Africa increased the yields due to more efficient agronomic practice led to higher returns and a consequent demand for more land suitable for tea planting particularly in those areas experiencing the high rainfall required for optimum tea production. Large tracts of these areas are preserved as gazette forests to conserve and regulate water supplies and by the mid-1950s there was opposition in Kenya to any further expansion of tea plantations because of the risk to water supplies if forests excision were allowed to continue.en
dc.description.statusUnpublisheden
dc.identifier.citationEast African Agricultural And Forestry Journal, 43 (Special Issue 1979), p. 51-54en
dc.identifier.issn0012-8325*
dc.identifier.urihttp://localhost:8080/dspace/handle/0/37null
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/en
dc.subject.agrovocCommercial development of Sambret estateen
dc.titleTHE COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF SAMBRET ESTATEen
dc.typeJournal Contribution*
dc.type.refereedRefereeden
dc.type.specifiedArticleen

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