Where to Target Conservation Agriculture for African Smallholders? How to Overcome Challenges Associated with its Implementation? Experience from Eastern and Southern Africa

被引:40
作者
Baudron, Frederic [1 ]
Thierfelder, Christian [2 ]
Nyagumbo, Isaiah [2 ]
Gerard, Bruno [3 ]
机构
[1] CIMMYT, ILRI, Shola Campus,POB 5689, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
[2] CIMMYT, Harare, Zimbabwe
[3] CIMMYT, Mexico City 06600, Mexico
关键词
niche; reduced tillage; no tillage; energy-saving technology; erosion; water use efficiency; residue trade-off; innovation platform;
D O I
10.3390/environments2030338
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Since the paper by Giller et al. (2009), the debate surrounding the suitability of conservation agriculture (CA) for African smallholders has remained polarized between proponents and opponents. The debate also gave rise to a few studies that attempted to identify the "niche" where CA would fit in the region, but the insight offered by these studies has been limited. In this paper, we first analyze the rationale of adoption where it occurred globally to define "drivers" of adoption. Our analysis suggests that CA has first and foremost been adopted under the premises of being energy-saving (time and/or power), erosion-controlling, and water-use efficient, but rarely to increase yield. We then define the niche where CA fits, based on these drivers of adoption, as systems where (1) the energy available for crop establishment is limited and/or costly (including labor and draft power); (2) delayed planting results in a significant yield decline; (3) yield is limited or co-limited by water; and/or (4) severe erosion problems threaten the short-to medium-term productivity of farmland. In Eastern and Southern Africa, this niche appears rather large and likely to expand in the near future. When implemented within this niche, CA may still be limited by "performance challenges" that do not constitute drivers or barriers to adoption, but limitations to the performance of CA. We argue that most of these performance challenges can (and should) be addressed by agronomic and socio-economic research, and provide four examples where the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and its partners have been successfully alleviating four very different challenges through research and development (R&D) in Eastern and Southern Africa. Finally, we describe an iterative and multi-scale R&D approach currently used by CIMMYT in Eastern and Southern Africa to overcome challenges associated with the implementation of CA by African smallholders. This approach could also be useful for other complex combinations of technologies aiming at sustainable intensification.
引用
收藏
页码:338 / 357
页数:20
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]   Mineralisation of crop residues on the soil surface or incorporated in the soil under controlled conditions [J].
Abiven, Samuel ;
Recous, Sylvie .
BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 2007, 43 (06) :849-852
[2]  
Admassu S., 2015, FIELD CROPS RE UNPUB
[3]   Ad Hoc Modeling in Agronomy: What Have We Learned in the Last 15 Years? [J].
Affholder, F. ;
Tittonell, P. ;
Corbeels, M. ;
Roux, S. ;
Motisi, N. ;
Tixier, P. ;
Wery, J. .
AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 2012, 104 (03) :735-748
[4]   From adoption claims to understanding farmers and contexts: A literature review of Conservation Agriculture (CA) adoption among smallholder farmers in southern Africa [J].
Andersson, Jens A. ;
D'Souza, Shereen .
AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2014, 187 :116-132
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2002, ECOL INDIC, DOI DOI 10.1016/S1470-160X(02)00043-2
[6]  
[Anonymous], 2012, FIELD ACTIONS SCI RE
[7]   RESTORING CROPLAND PRODUCTIVITY AND PROFITABILITY IN NORTHERN ETHIOPIAN DRYLANDS AFTER NINE YEARS OF RESOURCE-CONSERVING AGRICULTURE [J].
Araya, Tesfay ;
Nyssen, Jan ;
Govaerts, Bram ;
Baudron, Frederic ;
Carpentier, Louise ;
Bauer, Hans ;
Lanckriet, Sil ;
Deckers, Jozef ;
Cornelis, Wim M. .
EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE, 2016, 52 (02) :165-187
[8]   Agricultural intensification in the Sahel - The ladder approach [J].
Aune, Jens B. ;
Bationo, Andre .
AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS, 2008, 98 (02) :119-125
[9]   Breeding for improved abiotic stress tolerance in maize adapted to southern Africa [J].
Bänziger, M ;
Setimela, PS ;
Hodson, D ;
Vivek, B .
AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2006, 80 (1-3) :212-224
[10]  
Baudron F., 2007, CONSERVATION AGR ZAM