Integrated Soil Fertility Management in Sub-Saharan Africa: Unravelling Local Adaptation

AuthorBernard Vanlauwe
AuthorKatrien Descheemaeker
AuthorKen E. Giller
AuthorJ. Huising
AuthorR. Merckx
AuthorGenerose Nziguheba
AuthorWendt John
AuthorShamie Zingore
Date of acession2023-12-06T07:14:47Z
Date of availability2023-12-06T07:14:47Z
Date of issue2015-06-22
AbstractIntensification of smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa is necessary to address rural poverty and natural resource degradation. Integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) is a means to enhance crop productivity while maximizing the agronomic efficiency (AE) of applied inputs, and can thus contribute to sustainable intensification. ISFM consists of a set of best practices, preferably used in combination, including the use of appropriate germplasm, the appropriate use of fertilizer and of organic resources, and good agronomic practices. The large variability in soil fertility conditions within smallholder farms is also recognized within ISFM, including soils with constraints beyond those addressed by fertilizer and organic inputs. The variable biophysical environments that characterize smallholder farming systems have profound effects on crop productivity and AE, and targeted application of agro-inputs and management practices is necessary to enhance AE. Further, management decisions depend on the farmer’s resource endowments and production objectives. In this paper we discuss the “local adaptation” component of ISFM and how this can be conceptualized within an ISFM framework, backstopped by analysis of AE at plot and farm level. At plot level, a set of four constraints to maximum AE is discussed in relation to “local adaptation”: soil acidity, secondary nutrient and micronutrient (SMN) deficiencies, physical constraints, and drought stress. In each of these cases, examples are presented whereby amendments and/or practices addressing these have a significantly positive impact on fertilizer AE, including mechanistic principles underlying these effects. While the impact of such amendments and/or practices is easily understood for some practices (e.g. the application of SMNs where these are limiting), for others, more complex processes influence AE (e.g. water harvesting under varying rainfall conditions). At farm scale, adjusting fertilizer applications to within-farm soil fertility gradients has the potential to increase AE compared with blanket recommendations, in particular where fertility gradients are strong. In the final section, “local adaption” is discussed in relation to scale issues and decision support tools are evaluated as a means to create a better understanding of complexity at farm level and to communicate appropriate scenarios for allocating agro-inputs and management practices within heterogeneous farming environments.
URLhttps://hub.ifdc.org/handle/20.500.14297/2750
Languageen
SubjectSoil fertility
TitleIntegrated Soil Fertility Management in Sub-Saharan Africa: Unravelling Local Adaptation
TypeArticle
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