18 Feb 2004 13:30
Unit:
Wageningen University
Location:
Aula (gebouw 362), Gen. Foulkesweg 1, Wageningen
Promotor:
prof.dr. L. Brussaard (Soil Biology and Biological Soil Quality)prof.dr.ir. L. Stroosnijder (Erosion and Soil & Water Conservation)
Co Promotor:
Dr. A. Mando (IFDC-Division Afrique, Lomé, Togo)
Soil Quality Improvement for Crop Production in semi-arid West Africa
Soil quality maintenance and crop production improvement require appropriate cropping technologies. Thus, experiments have been carried the south of Burkina Faso. The results show that adoption of improved soil fertility technologies 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 but decrease soil carbon with fertilisation. Combination of crop residues and urea may reverse this negative effect. 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. 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.