42-7 Developing Sustainable Conservation Agriculture for Smallholder Farmers In Southern Africa.
See more from this Division: Special SessionsSee more from this Session: Conservation Agriculture for Improving Food Security and Livelihoods of Rural Smallholders In Rainfed Regions of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean
Monday, October 22, 2012: 11:10 AM
Duke Energy Convention Center, Room 203, Level 2
Conservation agriculture systems are complex production systems that must be adapted to the local ecosystem. Many common African cropping systems are tillage intensive and highly unsustainable both from a soil loss (>100 ton/ha annual loss) and crop yield (maize yields of <1 ton/ha) perspectives. The objectives of this research were to develop sound N, P and K fertilizer recommendations, determine optimum plant populations, evaluate the utility of various cover crops to reduce weed pressure from winter annual weeds, and to determine the relative C sequestration rates on soils farmed using no-till practices. Our results suggest that approximately 100-60-30 of N-P-K are needed per hectare to produce more than 5 t/ha maize, that the optimal plant population for maize is approximately 44,000 plants per hectare, that cover crops are reducing weed infestations by winter annuals by approximately 90%, and that the C sequestration rates on no-till soils are approximately 300 kg C per hectare per year. These results suggest that solid agronomic practices improve local food security and provide global mitigation of greenhouse gases.
See more from this Division: Special SessionsSee more from this Session: Conservation Agriculture for Improving Food Security and Livelihoods of Rural Smallholders In Rainfed Regions of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean