Authors
Marc Corbeels, Jan De Graaff, Tim Hycenth Ndah, Eric Penot, Frederic Baudron, Krishna Naudin, Nadine Andrieu, Guillaume Chirat, Johannes Schuler, Isaiah Nyagumbo, Leonard Rusinamhodzi, Karim Traore, Hamisi Dulla Mzoba, Ivan Solomon Adolwa
Publication date
2014/4/1
Journal
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Volume
187
Pages
155-170
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Conservation agriculture (CA) is increasingly promoted in Africa as an alternative for coping with the need to increase food production on the basis of more sustainable farming practices. Success with adopting CA on farms in Africa has been limited, despite more than two decades of research and development investments. Through analyzing past and on-going CA experiences in a set of case studies, this paper seeks to better understand the reasons for the limited adoption of CA and to assess where, when and for whom CA works best. CA is analyzed and understood within a framework that distinguishes the following scales of analysis: field, farm, village and region. CA has a potential to increase crop yields in the fields, especially under conditions of erratic rainfall and over the long-term as a result of a gradual increase of overall soil quality. The impact on farm income with the practice of CA on some fields of the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Corbeels, J De Graaff, TH Ndah, E Penot, F Baudron… - Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 2014