Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi

In Africa, achieving sustainable agricultural intensification - increasing agricultural output without deleterious environmental impacts or converting more land for cultivation - will depend greatly on the actions of smallholder farmers and the policies that influence them. Whatever the future holds...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Burke, William J., Snapp, Sieglinde S., Peter, Brad G., Jayne, Thom S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125462
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author Burke, William J.
Snapp, Sieglinde S.
Peter, Brad G.
Jayne, Thom S.
author_browse Burke, William J.
Jayne, Thom S.
Peter, Brad G.
Snapp, Sieglinde S.
author_facet Burke, William J.
Snapp, Sieglinde S.
Peter, Brad G.
Jayne, Thom S.
author_sort Burke, William J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Africa, achieving sustainable agricultural intensification - increasing agricultural output without deleterious environmental impacts or converting more land for cultivation - will depend greatly on the actions of smallholder farmers and the policies that influence them. Whatever the future holds, the vast majority of farmers right now are small. Using multiple lines of evidence across disciplines, we examine trends in productivity of land and fertilizers in Malawi. Unfortunately, our effort uncovers disturbing trends that indicate intensification and sustainability are at risk. Two time-series datasets of satellite-based vegetative indices show a generally flat but highly variable trend in the productivity of agricultural land with epochs of steep decline. This is notably despite substantial (and successful) government effort to promote fertilizer use. We also compile evidence from several studies over three decades that use field-level data from farmers and suggest substantial declining maize yield response to fertilizer over time. These trends are consistent with soil degradation, the disappearance of fallow land and minimal investment in rehabilitation practices in densely populated areas, putting agricultural productivity in jeopardy. These signs of the harmful impacts that narrow approaches to productivity improvement may be having in Malawi are an early warning sign to policy makers in Malawi and around the continent that a more holistic and nuanced strategy is necessary for sustainable intensification in agriculture.
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spelling CGSpace1254622025-10-26T13:02:00Z Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi Burke, William J. Snapp, Sieglinde S. Peter, Brad G. Jayne, Thom S. intensification sustainable agriculture fertilizers pollution environmental engineering In Africa, achieving sustainable agricultural intensification - increasing agricultural output without deleterious environmental impacts or converting more land for cultivation - will depend greatly on the actions of smallholder farmers and the policies that influence them. Whatever the future holds, the vast majority of farmers right now are small. Using multiple lines of evidence across disciplines, we examine trends in productivity of land and fertilizers in Malawi. Unfortunately, our effort uncovers disturbing trends that indicate intensification and sustainability are at risk. Two time-series datasets of satellite-based vegetative indices show a generally flat but highly variable trend in the productivity of agricultural land with epochs of steep decline. This is notably despite substantial (and successful) government effort to promote fertilizer use. We also compile evidence from several studies over three decades that use field-level data from farmers and suggest substantial declining maize yield response to fertilizer over time. These trends are consistent with soil degradation, the disappearance of fallow land and minimal investment in rehabilitation practices in densely populated areas, putting agricultural productivity in jeopardy. These signs of the harmful impacts that narrow approaches to productivity improvement may be having in Malawi are an early warning sign to policy makers in Malawi and around the continent that a more holistic and nuanced strategy is necessary for sustainable intensification in agriculture. 2022-09 2022-11-15T18:30:20Z 2022-11-15T18:30:20Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125462 en https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/319866 Limited Access Elsevier Burke, W., Snapp, S., Peter, B., and Jayne, T. 2022. Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi. Science of the Total Environment 837: 155758
spellingShingle intensification
sustainable agriculture
fertilizers
pollution
environmental engineering
Burke, William J.
Snapp, Sieglinde S.
Peter, Brad G.
Jayne, Thom S.
Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title_full Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title_fullStr Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title_short Sustainable intensification in jeopardy: Transdisciplinary evidence from Malawi
title_sort sustainable intensification in jeopardy transdisciplinary evidence from malawi
topic intensification
sustainable agriculture
fertilizers
pollution
environmental engineering
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125462
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AT jaynethoms sustainableintensificationinjeopardytransdisciplinaryevidencefrommalawi