000 03618nam a22003377a 4500
001 G96011
003 MX-TxCIM
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040 _aMX-TxCIM
090 _aCIS-6589
100 1 _aFamba, S.I.
_uFrom Soil to Soul: Crop Production for Improved African Livelihoods and a Better Environment for Future Generations; Programme and Abstracts of Papers. African Crop Science Society Conference, 10; Maputo (Mozambique); 10-13 Oct 2011.
245 0 0 _aChallenges of conservation agriculture to increase maize yield in vulnerable production systems in central Mozambique
260 _bAfrican Crop Science Society :
_c2011
300 _ap. 173
500 _aAbstract only
520 _aSmallholder farming under rainfed low input crop production in central Mozambique is characterized by decline in soil fertility, low yields and risks of crop failure. Many rural households therefore face food insecurity. To revert this situation, conservation agriculture (CA) based on minimum soil disturbance, crop residue retention and crop rotations has been promoted in the region since the late 1990s. This study presents the results of a CA long term trial (LTT) initiated in the year 2006 at Sussundenga Research Station (central Mozambique). The trial monitors and evaluates the effects over time of CA practices on crop yield, soil quality, weeds, pests and diseases. The LTT is designed as a completely randomized block with four replications: one conventional tilled treatment with sole maize (Zea mays L.), using the mouldboard plough and residue removal and nine CA treatments with residue retention using different seeding technologies and crop rotations of maize with sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) and beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.). Apart from mouldboard ploughing three different seeding technologies are studied in the LTT: direct seeding with animal traction, manual planting basins and the jab planter. Local climate at Sussundenga is wet semi-arid, the soil type is a Haplic Lixisol (FAO soil classification system) with a sandy loam surface soil texture. This study presents the effects of CA on maize productivity, water infiltration and soil fauna activity under rainfed conditions with data from the cropping seasons 2008/09 and 2009/10. High termite activity in the area prevented the accumulation of crop residues in CA plots. Therefore, field results did not show significant differences in maize yield and soil fauna activity. Infiltration, measured by a mini-rainfall simulator, was significantly higher at probability level of 5% (16-30% higher) on CA plots where beans were previously planted in maize-sunflower-beans rotation compared to the conventional tilled treatment. This study did not show immediate benefits of CA for quick adoption by smallholder farmers. However, field observation suggest significant labour gains when fields are direct seeded instead of traditionally cultivated with the mouldboard plough. Further studies are recommended to assess the comparative economic advantage of applying CA to smallholder farmers.
536 _aConservation Agriculture Program
546 _aEnglish
593 _aLucia Segura
594 _aINT2939
595 _aCSC
650 1 0 _aAnimal Traction Seeding
650 1 0 _aMini-rainfall Simulation
650 1 0 _aTermite Activity
650 1 0 _aConservation agriculture
_92619
700 1 _aLoiskandl, W.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _aWall, P.,
_ecoaut.
700 1 _aThierfelder, C.
_gSustainable Intensification Program
_gSustainable Agrifood Systems
_8INT2939
_9877
942 _cPRO
999 _c8307
_d8307