The Native Shrubs Philiostigma reticulatum and Guiera senegalensis: The Unrecognized Potential to Remediate Degraded Soils and Optimize Productivity of Sahelian Agroecosystems

AuthorRichard P. Dick
AuthorModou Sène
AuthorMateugue Diack
AuthorMamadou Khouma
AuthorAminata N. Badiane
AuthorSamba Arona Ndiaye Samba
AuthorIbrahima Diedhiou
AuthorAbel Lufafa
AuthorEkwe L. Dossa
AuthorFred Kizito
AuthorSire Diedhiou
AuthorJay Noller
AuthorMaria Dragila
Jurisdiction:Sahel
Date of acession2023-12-04T13:34:43Z
Date of availability2023-12-04T13:34:43Z
Date of issue2012-01
AbstractThe global objective of this study was to determine the unrecognized role of shrubs as key determinants in sequestration of C, water relations, and soil degradation mitigation in semiarid climatic regimes of Senegal that are representative of much of Sub-Sahelian Africa. The results showed that shrubs are the dominant controllers of hydrology, C biomass on the landscape, microbiology, and crop productivity in agroecosystem of Senegal. The major findings were: Shrubs residues decompose rapidly enough to allow non-thermal management. Shrub residues promote crop growth but it takes 2 years of incorporation before beneficial impacts on crops were measured. Both shrubs are doing hydraulic lifting of water from wet subsoils to dry surface soils Shrubs are non-competitive with crops for water and increase water and nutrient efficiency. During periods of excess rainfall shrubs promote groundwater recharge and therefore reduce surface runoff losses. G. senegalensis had the most profound impact on yields which after fours cropping the declining yields in the absence of crops resulted in a 242% difference in yield between plots with and with out this shrub. These positive impacts occurred even in the absence of fertilizer applications
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.irdeditions.2126
URLhttps://hub.ifdc.org/handle/20.500.14297/2733
URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.irdeditions.2126
Languageen
SubjectCrops
SubjectProductivity
SubjectSoil
TitleThe Native Shrubs Philiostigma reticulatum and Guiera senegalensis: The Unrecognized Potential to Remediate Degraded Soils and Optimize Productivity of Sahelian Agroecosystems
TypeBook chapter
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
The Native Shrubs Philiostigma reticulatum .pdf
Size:
72.12 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.71 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed to upon submission
Description:
Collections