Award details

Africa SOIL: Soil Organic matter Improves Livelihoods

ReferenceBB/T012552/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Liz Baggs
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr Jill Cairns, Dr Eric Paterson, Dr Christian Thierfelder
Institution University of Edinburgh
DepartmentThe Roslin Institute
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 250,740
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/07/2020
End date 30/04/2022
Duration22 months

Abstract

unavailable

Summary

Context: Southern Africa is being severely impacted by climate change, resulting in widespread poverty and under-nutrition. These effects are exacerbated by increasing population pressure, limiting resources (e.g. nutrients, water and soils), resulting in low, unstable yields, progressive soil degradation and depletion of inherent soil resources, such as soil organic matter. Smallholder systems, dependent on degraded soil of low fertility, are particularly vulnerable and lead to abject poverty. Maize is the single most important crop for more than 160 million people in eastern and southern Africa, occupying between 50-90% of the cultivated land area (over 17 million hectares, excluding South Africa), with a total production of 31 million tonnes. However, without new practices in the face of climate change and low soil nutrient availability, yields which are already low are predicted to further decline and farmers cannot escape this poverty trap. Technologies are urgently required for these systems that couple sustainable crop production and protection of the soil resource under changing conditions. Breeding for new maize varieties with greater tolerance to drought and enhanced ability to take up nitrogen from soil organic matter holds much promise to transform these cropping systems. Aims and objectives: Our aim is to provide a solution to this problem by empowering smallholder farmers with the knowledge and tools to replenish and utilise nutrients in soil more efficiently. Specifically, this will involve coupling conservation agriculture practices with selection of maize varieties best able to source nitrogen from soil organic matter. This will reduce the requirement and dependency for inorganic fertiliser application to improve yields. This provides both productivity and environmental benefits: greater yield stability under changing conditions particularly drought, lowering the need for inorganic fertiliser input, and averting further soil degradation through enhancing soil structure. Firstly, we will translate and build on our existing knowledge of abilities of different maize varieties to source nutrients from organic matter through establishment of demonstration and trial sites across an existing network of smallholder farms in NE Zimbabwe and S Malawi. We will discuss with farmers our approach, strategies to increase soil organic matter and expected impacts on maize yield in the context of local environmental and soil conditions. On-site findings will form the basis for environmental and economic assessments of this technology, and for soil organic matter considerations to be embedded into existing guidelines for conservation agriculture. Finally, we will work with plant breeders to move towards integrating environmental sustainability criteria into maize breeding programmes. Potential applications and benefits: Conservation agriculture, based on reduced soil inversion, crop residue retention and diversification is best suited to be practised under degraded, low fertile soils under drought conditions. Some drought tolerant maize varieties are excellent utilisers of soil organic matter replenished during conservation agriculture, which is anticipated to incur both economic and environmental benefits. Embedding this into variety selection criteria, takes us towards future breeding for sustainability that is best suited to the local context in southern Africa. This is an important step for improving food and nutritional security, environmental sustainability, reducing poverty, and enhancing the production environment of smallholder farmers and rural populations, in particular women, in southern Africa.

Impact Summary

Who will benefit? The primary beneficiaries are smallholder farmers in Zimbabwe and Malawi, who will benefit socially and economically from more sustainable maize yields, livelihood benefits and safe and nutritious food under a changing climate. Our "mother and baby trial" approach will enable on-farm demonstrations for soil organic management that we anticipate will directly reach >1800 farmers and 7200 indirect beneficiaries in the 22 months. There will also be wider reach across southern Africa beyond this project, as current soil organic matter utilising varieties, and in time new varieties, will be embedded into CIMMYT's conservation agriculture network across Zambia and more regions in Zimbabwe and Malawi. Other beneficiaries include national agricultural research and extension services (NARES), other small and medium enterprise (SME) seed companies, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), community-based organisations (CBOs) and other interested stakeholders. Our findings will be of interest to the Department of Research and Specialised Services (DR&SS), the Plant Protection Research Institute and the Genebank of Zimbabwe), long-term NGO partners of CIMMYT (such as Total LandCare (TLC), Malawi and Development Aid from People to People (DAPP)), private sector organisations (such as seed companies), and regional organisations (such as the Community Technology Development Trust). CIMMYT's maize research program is also collaborative with CIAT, ICRISAT, IITA, IFPRI and the World Agroforestry Centre, which will widen further the impact of this approach. How will they benefit? Our solution offers a "win-win-win" strategy: conservation agriculture is best suited for degraded, low fertile soils under drought conditions; we anticipate environmental and economic benefits from growing drought tolerant maize varieties that are also excellent utilisers of soil organic matter replenished during conservation agriculture; and embedding soil organic matter utilisation intovariety selection criteria, provides longer-term benefits of future breeding for sustainability that is best suited to the local context in southern Africa. Growing soil organic matter utilising varieties within conservation agriculture generates a circular nutrient economy in which soil organic matter build up resulting from residue management under conservation agriculture accumulates stocks of soil organic matter nitrogen that can be sourced by maize varieties best placed to utilise that nitrogen. This lowers the requirement for inorganic fertiliser, is likely to narrow the yield gap, and given that some of these varieties are also drought tolerant, offers resilience to future climate change. This is anticipated to result in benefits both for production and food security, as well as lowering negative environmental impacts associated with low soil fertility, soil degradation, loss of C, and offers further development of a climate smart practice increasing the sustainability of the system. This therefore provides a joint climate- and environment-smart technology.
Committee Not funded via Committee
Research TopicsCrop Science, Plant Science, Soil Science
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative Global Challenges Research Fund Translation Awards (GCRFTA) [2017]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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