Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa

Production and utilization of crop residues as mulch and effective weed management are two central elements in the successful implementation of Conservation Agriculture (CA) systems in southern Africa. Yet, the challenges of crop residue availability for mulch or the difficulties in managing weed proliferation in CA systems are bigger than a micro-level focus on weeds and crop residues themselves. The bottlenecks are symptoms of broader systemic complications that cannot be resolved without appreciating the interactions between the current scientific understanding of CA and its application in smallholder systems, private incentives, social norms, institutions, and government policy. In this paper, we elucidate a series of areas that represent some unquestioned answers about chemical weed control and unanswered questions about how to maintain groundcover demanding more research along the natural and social sciences continuum. In some communities, traditional rules that allow free-range grazing of livestock after harvesting present a barrier in surface crop residue management. On the other hand, many of the communities either burn, remove, or incorporate the residues into the soil thus hindering the near-permanent soil cover required in CA systems. The lack of soil cover also means that weed management through soil mulch is unachievable. Herbicides are often a successful stopgap solution to weed control, but they are costly, and most farmers do not use them as recommended, which reduces efficacy. Besides, the use of herbicides can cause environmental hazards and may affect human health. Here, we suggest further assessment of the manipulation of crop competition, the use of vigorously growing cover crops, exploration of allelopathy, and use of microorganisms in managing weeds and reducing seed production to deplete the soil weed seed bank. We also suggest in situ production of plant biomass, use of unpalatable species for mulch generation and change of grazing by-laws towards a holistic management of pastures to reduce the competition for crop residues. However, these depend on the socio-economic status dynamics at farmer and community level.

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Main Authors: Thierfelder, C., Mhlanga, B., Ngoma, H., Marenya, P.P., Md Abdul Matin, Tufa, A.H., Alene, A.D., Chikoye, D.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2024
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS, CROP RESIDUES, ZERO TILLAGE, SOCIAL NORMS, SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION, WEED CONTROL, Sustainable Agrifood Systems,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/23068
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-230682024-02-28T20:20:26Z Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa Thierfelder, C. Mhlanga, B. Ngoma, H. Marenya, P.P. Md Abdul Matin Tufa, A.H. Alene, A.D. Chikoye, D. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS CROP RESIDUES ZERO TILLAGE SOCIAL NORMS SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION WEED CONTROL Sustainable Agrifood Systems Production and utilization of crop residues as mulch and effective weed management are two central elements in the successful implementation of Conservation Agriculture (CA) systems in southern Africa. Yet, the challenges of crop residue availability for mulch or the difficulties in managing weed proliferation in CA systems are bigger than a micro-level focus on weeds and crop residues themselves. The bottlenecks are symptoms of broader systemic complications that cannot be resolved without appreciating the interactions between the current scientific understanding of CA and its application in smallholder systems, private incentives, social norms, institutions, and government policy. In this paper, we elucidate a series of areas that represent some unquestioned answers about chemical weed control and unanswered questions about how to maintain groundcover demanding more research along the natural and social sciences continuum. In some communities, traditional rules that allow free-range grazing of livestock after harvesting present a barrier in surface crop residue management. On the other hand, many of the communities either burn, remove, or incorporate the residues into the soil thus hindering the near-permanent soil cover required in CA systems. The lack of soil cover also means that weed management through soil mulch is unachievable. Herbicides are often a successful stopgap solution to weed control, but they are costly, and most farmers do not use them as recommended, which reduces efficacy. Besides, the use of herbicides can cause environmental hazards and may affect human health. Here, we suggest further assessment of the manipulation of crop competition, the use of vigorously growing cover crops, exploration of allelopathy, and use of microorganisms in managing weeds and reducing seed production to deplete the soil weed seed bank. We also suggest in situ production of plant biomass, use of unpalatable species for mulch generation and change of grazing by-laws towards a holistic management of pastures to reduce the competition for crop residues. However, these depend on the socio-economic status dynamics at farmer and community level. 2024-02-23T21:30:14Z 2024-02-23T21:30:14Z 2024 Article Published Version https://hdl.handle.net/10883/23068 10.1017/S1742170523000510 English Climate adaptation & mitigation Environmental health & biodiversity Nutrition, health & food security Poverty reduction, livelihoods & jobs Diversification in East and Southern Africa Systems Transformation Resilient Agrifood Systems Africa RISING Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139660 CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose Open Access Southern Africa United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 39 7 1742-1705 Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS
CROP RESIDUES
ZERO TILLAGE
SOCIAL NORMS
SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION
WEED CONTROL
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS
CROP RESIDUES
ZERO TILLAGE
SOCIAL NORMS
SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION
WEED CONTROL
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS
CROP RESIDUES
ZERO TILLAGE
SOCIAL NORMS
SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION
WEED CONTROL
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS
CROP RESIDUES
ZERO TILLAGE
SOCIAL NORMS
SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION
WEED CONTROL
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
Thierfelder, C.
Mhlanga, B.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Md Abdul Matin
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Chikoye, D.
Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
description Production and utilization of crop residues as mulch and effective weed management are two central elements in the successful implementation of Conservation Agriculture (CA) systems in southern Africa. Yet, the challenges of crop residue availability for mulch or the difficulties in managing weed proliferation in CA systems are bigger than a micro-level focus on weeds and crop residues themselves. The bottlenecks are symptoms of broader systemic complications that cannot be resolved without appreciating the interactions between the current scientific understanding of CA and its application in smallholder systems, private incentives, social norms, institutions, and government policy. In this paper, we elucidate a series of areas that represent some unquestioned answers about chemical weed control and unanswered questions about how to maintain groundcover demanding more research along the natural and social sciences continuum. In some communities, traditional rules that allow free-range grazing of livestock after harvesting present a barrier in surface crop residue management. On the other hand, many of the communities either burn, remove, or incorporate the residues into the soil thus hindering the near-permanent soil cover required in CA systems. The lack of soil cover also means that weed management through soil mulch is unachievable. Herbicides are often a successful stopgap solution to weed control, but they are costly, and most farmers do not use them as recommended, which reduces efficacy. Besides, the use of herbicides can cause environmental hazards and may affect human health. Here, we suggest further assessment of the manipulation of crop competition, the use of vigorously growing cover crops, exploration of allelopathy, and use of microorganisms in managing weeds and reducing seed production to deplete the soil weed seed bank. We also suggest in situ production of plant biomass, use of unpalatable species for mulch generation and change of grazing by-laws towards a holistic management of pastures to reduce the competition for crop residues. However, these depend on the socio-economic status dynamics at farmer and community level.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATED CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS
CROP RESIDUES
ZERO TILLAGE
SOCIAL NORMS
SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION
WEED CONTROL
Sustainable Agrifood Systems
author Thierfelder, C.
Mhlanga, B.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Md Abdul Matin
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Chikoye, D.
author_facet Thierfelder, C.
Mhlanga, B.
Ngoma, H.
Marenya, P.P.
Md Abdul Matin
Tufa, A.H.
Alene, A.D.
Chikoye, D.
author_sort Thierfelder, C.
title Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
title_short Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
title_full Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
title_fullStr Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in Conservation Agriculture systems of southern Africa
title_sort unanswered questions and unquestioned answers: the challenges of crop residue retention and weed control in conservation agriculture systems of southern africa
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/23068
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