2017
DOI: 10.1080/14735903.2017.1393038
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Looking back and moving forward: 50 years of soil and soil fertility management research in sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract: Low and declining soil fertility has been recognized for a long time as a major impediment to intensifying agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Consequently, from the inception of international agricultural research, centres operating in SSA have had a research programme focusing on soil and soil fertility management, including the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA). The scope, content, and approaches of soil and soil fertility management research have changed over the past decades in r… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…This may be because inorganic fertilizers contain substantially higher amounts of nutrients, especially macro-nutrients for cereal crop performance which are readily available to crops than that from organic sources [4,64,70]. Yet, this result is not in tandem with the expected complementary use of organic and inorganic fertilizer within the framework of integrated soil fertility management practices [1,71]. The result also negates the findings of [55], where the application of inorganic fertilizer marginally increased the adoption of animal manure.…”
Section: Intercropping Crop Rotationmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…This may be because inorganic fertilizers contain substantially higher amounts of nutrients, especially macro-nutrients for cereal crop performance which are readily available to crops than that from organic sources [4,64,70]. Yet, this result is not in tandem with the expected complementary use of organic and inorganic fertilizer within the framework of integrated soil fertility management practices [1,71]. The result also negates the findings of [55], where the application of inorganic fertilizer marginally increased the adoption of animal manure.…”
Section: Intercropping Crop Rotationmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Interestingly, the category of 'social capital/group interactions' is positive and significant in most cases for agroforestry and livestock practices. 8 Most observations in this category (90 per cent) come from papers publishes after 2005, which reflects the increasing understanding of the social context in the adoption literature (Munguia and Llewellyn, 2020;Vanlauwe et al, 2017). Most practices in these categories require bigger up-front investments (e.g.…”
Section: Significance Vote-count Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of the technologies studied in the adoption literature have the potential to improve productivity and some also have expected resilience benefits. These include, improved crop varieties, soil and water management techniques and agroforestry to deal with a variety of climatic shocks that are expected to become more frequent and severe with climate change (Vanlauwe et al, 2017). Therefore, a systematic review of the barriers to the adoption of agricultural technologies in SSA is needed to provide a thorough understanding of the literature to date and support action towards achieving the SDGs.…”
Section: The Current Relevance Of the Adoption Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In combination with a suit of other constraints this resulted in particularly low uptake rates. The history of research on soil fertility management in SSA is full of such examples; good ideas that were scientifically sound but had little potential for wider-scale adoption [12] .…”
Section: Sustainable Intensification Of Agriculturementioning
confidence: 99%