Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa

Soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement in semi-arid West Africa require appropriate cropping technologies, which are ecologically sound and economically viable. Thus, on-farm and on-station experiments have been carried out on the central plateau and in the south of Burkina Faso The results show that adoption of improved soil fertility technologies such as composting by farmers is determined by soil fertility status, access to the market and social reasons. Organic amendments increase crop production but its effects on soil carbon depend on its quality. Soil tillage improves crop performance as a result of enhanced crop nutrient uptake and water use efficiency but decrease soil carbon with fertilisation. Combination of crop residues and urea may reverse this negative effect. Soil fauna accounted for 50 % of crop production. Termites mediated the disappearance of low-quality organic amendments. Soil carbon build-up in the presence of soil fauna requires the use of easily decomposable organic material or combined low quality organic material with nitrogen fertiliser. Phosphate rock-derived phosphorus availability is 4 times higher in earthworm casts than in surrounding soil. Single use of nitrogen fertiliser leads to low use efficiency by crop and induces low to negative economic benefit. Combination of organic resource and fertiliser significantly increases crop performance and economic benefit of N fertilisers. Without both organic and mineral external inputs, soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement cannot be achieved at the same time in semi-arid West-Africa. Improving soil quality and crop performance in semi-arid West-Africa is best achieved with an integrated soil fertility management including external inputs (organic and mineral), the contribution of soil fauna and soil and water conservation measures and in some cases with tillage

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ouédraogo, E.
Other Authors: Stroosnijder, Leo
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wageningen Universiteit
Subjects:crop production, semiarid soils, semiarid zones, soil conservation, soil degradation, soil fertility, soil quality, tillage, west africa, bodembescherming, bodemdegradatie, bodemkwaliteit, bodemvruchtbaarheid, gewasproductie, grondbewerking, semi-aride gronden, semi-aride klimaatzones, west-afrika,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/soil-quality-improvement-for-crop-production-in-semi-arid-west-af-2
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3371812024-11-15 Ouédraogo, E. Stroosnijder, Leo Brussaard, Lijbert Doctoral thesis Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa 2004 Soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement in semi-arid West Africa require appropriate cropping technologies, which are ecologically sound and economically viable. Thus, on-farm and on-station experiments have been carried out on the central plateau and in the south of Burkina Faso The results show that adoption of improved soil fertility technologies such as composting by farmers is determined by soil fertility status, access to the market and social reasons. Organic amendments increase crop production but its effects on soil carbon depend on its quality. Soil tillage improves crop performance as a result of enhanced crop nutrient uptake and water use efficiency but decrease soil carbon with fertilisation. Combination of crop residues and urea may reverse this negative effect. Soil fauna accounted for 50 % of crop production. Termites mediated the disappearance of low-quality organic amendments. Soil carbon build-up in the presence of soil fauna requires the use of easily decomposable organic material or combined low quality organic material with nitrogen fertiliser. Phosphate rock-derived phosphorus availability is 4 times higher in earthworm casts than in surrounding soil. Single use of nitrogen fertiliser leads to low use efficiency by crop and induces low to negative economic benefit. Combination of organic resource and fertiliser significantly increases crop performance and economic benefit of N fertilisers. Without both organic and mineral external inputs, soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement cannot be achieved at the same time in semi-arid West-Africa. Improving soil quality and crop performance in semi-arid West-Africa is best achieved with an integrated soil fertility management including external inputs (organic and mineral), the contribution of soil fauna and soil and water conservation measures and in some cases with tillage en Wageningen Universiteit application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/soil-quality-improvement-for-crop-production-in-semi-arid-west-af-2 10.18174/121521 https://edepot.wur.nl/121521 crop production semiarid soils semiarid zones soil conservation soil degradation soil fertility soil quality tillage west africa bodembescherming bodemdegradatie bodemkwaliteit bodemvruchtbaarheid gewasproductie grondbewerking semi-aride gronden semi-aride klimaatzones west-afrika Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic crop production
semiarid soils
semiarid zones
soil conservation
soil degradation
soil fertility
soil quality
tillage
west africa
bodembescherming
bodemdegradatie
bodemkwaliteit
bodemvruchtbaarheid
gewasproductie
grondbewerking
semi-aride gronden
semi-aride klimaatzones
west-afrika
crop production
semiarid soils
semiarid zones
soil conservation
soil degradation
soil fertility
soil quality
tillage
west africa
bodembescherming
bodemdegradatie
bodemkwaliteit
bodemvruchtbaarheid
gewasproductie
grondbewerking
semi-aride gronden
semi-aride klimaatzones
west-afrika
spellingShingle crop production
semiarid soils
semiarid zones
soil conservation
soil degradation
soil fertility
soil quality
tillage
west africa
bodembescherming
bodemdegradatie
bodemkwaliteit
bodemvruchtbaarheid
gewasproductie
grondbewerking
semi-aride gronden
semi-aride klimaatzones
west-afrika
crop production
semiarid soils
semiarid zones
soil conservation
soil degradation
soil fertility
soil quality
tillage
west africa
bodembescherming
bodemdegradatie
bodemkwaliteit
bodemvruchtbaarheid
gewasproductie
grondbewerking
semi-aride gronden
semi-aride klimaatzones
west-afrika
Ouédraogo, E.
Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
description Soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement in semi-arid West Africa require appropriate cropping technologies, which are ecologically sound and economically viable. Thus, on-farm and on-station experiments have been carried out on the central plateau and in the south of Burkina Faso The results show that adoption of improved soil fertility technologies such as composting by farmers is determined by soil fertility status, access to the market and social reasons. Organic amendments increase crop production but its effects on soil carbon depend on its quality. Soil tillage improves crop performance as a result of enhanced crop nutrient uptake and water use efficiency but decrease soil carbon with fertilisation. Combination of crop residues and urea may reverse this negative effect. Soil fauna accounted for 50 % of crop production. Termites mediated the disappearance of low-quality organic amendments. Soil carbon build-up in the presence of soil fauna requires the use of easily decomposable organic material or combined low quality organic material with nitrogen fertiliser. Phosphate rock-derived phosphorus availability is 4 times higher in earthworm casts than in surrounding soil. Single use of nitrogen fertiliser leads to low use efficiency by crop and induces low to negative economic benefit. Combination of organic resource and fertiliser significantly increases crop performance and economic benefit of N fertilisers. Without both organic and mineral external inputs, soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement cannot be achieved at the same time in semi-arid West-Africa. Improving soil quality and crop performance in semi-arid West-Africa is best achieved with an integrated soil fertility management including external inputs (organic and mineral), the contribution of soil fauna and soil and water conservation measures and in some cases with tillage
author2 Stroosnijder, Leo
author_facet Stroosnijder, Leo
Ouédraogo, E.
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet crop production
semiarid soils
semiarid zones
soil conservation
soil degradation
soil fertility
soil quality
tillage
west africa
bodembescherming
bodemdegradatie
bodemkwaliteit
bodemvruchtbaarheid
gewasproductie
grondbewerking
semi-aride gronden
semi-aride klimaatzones
west-afrika
author Ouédraogo, E.
author_sort Ouédraogo, E.
title Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
title_short Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
title_full Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
title_fullStr Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid West Africa
title_sort soil quality improvement for crop production in semi-arid west africa
publisher Wageningen Universiteit
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/soil-quality-improvement-for-crop-production-in-semi-arid-west-af-2
work_keys_str_mv AT ouedraogoe soilqualityimprovementforcropproductioninsemiaridwestafrica
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