Similar Items: Increasing land sustainability and productivity through and fertility management in the West African Sudano-Sahelian zone
- Use of mineral and organic inputs to increase land productivity and sustainability with special reference to the drylands of West Africa
- Farming in the drylands of West Africa: promising soil fertility restoration technologies
- Soil fertility management for sustainable land use in the West African Sudano-Sahelian zone
- Cropping systems in the Sudano-Sahelian zone: implications on soil fertility management over varied seasons
- Long term effects of reduced fertilizer rates on millet yields and soil properties in the West-African Sahel
- Research highlights on integrated soil fertility management in the Sahel
Author: Bationo, B. André
- On-farm evaluation and scaling-up of soil fertility management technologies in Western Kenya
- Long-term effects of integrated soil fertility management practices on soil chemical properties in the Sahel
- Soil carbon, multiple benefits
- Towards developing scalable climate-smart village models: approach and lessons learnt from pilot research in West Africa
- Soil fertility management and cowpea production in the semi arid tropics of West Africa
- Improving cereal productivity and farmers' income using a strategic application of fertilizers in West Africa
Author: Vanlauwe, Bernard
- Strides from the heart of Africa
- Senna siamea trees recycle Ca from a Ca-rich subsoil and increase the topsoil pH in agroforestry systems in the West African derived savanna zone
- Land and Soil Health Assessment in the Maringa-Lopori-Wamba (MLW) Landscape, Djolu, Yamboyo, DRC as part of the CARPE Phase II-Sustainable Opportunities for Improving Livelihoods Project
- A model for promoting a versatile crop that has remained minor: the case of soybean in Kenya
- Technical cooperation and Data-Driven Development for Digital Soil Maps under the West African Regional Hub for Fertilizers and Soil Health [A New Soil Health Vision for West Africa]
- Residue quality and decomposition: An unsteady relationship?