Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?

Soil acidity has recently reemerged as a priority topic in agricultural policy discussions in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most of the (still limited) existing data on soil acidity is focused on conditions in the top 20 cm of the soil profile. While addressing topsoil acidity is a logical starting p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Silva, João Vasco, Sida, Tesfaye S., Chamberlin, Jordan
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: EiA 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162896
_version_ 1855526779127595008
author Silva, João Vasco
Sida, Tesfaye S.
Chamberlin, Jordan
author_browse Chamberlin, Jordan
Sida, Tesfaye S.
Silva, João Vasco
author_facet Silva, João Vasco
Sida, Tesfaye S.
Chamberlin, Jordan
author_sort Silva, João Vasco
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Soil acidity has recently reemerged as a priority topic in agricultural policy discussions in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most of the (still limited) existing data on soil acidity is focused on conditions in the top 20 cm of the soil profile. While addressing topsoil acidity is a logical starting point for most cropping systems affected by acidity-related production constraints, the potential importance of addressing subsoil acidity remains unclear. In the face of deepening seasonal weather variability associated with climate change, addressing subsoil acidity may be strategically important. In periods of water stress, staple crops such maize may develop deeper root systems to enhance water uptake capacity and thereby overcome drought related stress. Such capacities, however, may be severely curtailed by subsoil acidity which may impede root growth in the soil profile. This elevates the question from an esoteric soil science concern to a practical large-scale soil health management inquiry. However, because so little empirical work has been done to date on this topic, the strategic relevance of this adaptation pathway is not yet well understood. We outline the main conceptual issues of relevance to agricultural development, summarize the available information, and suggest priority areas for further empirical research within the region.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace162896
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher EiA
publisherStr EiA
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1628962025-05-04T09:21:45Z Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda? Silva, João Vasco Sida, Tesfaye S. Chamberlin, Jordan subsoil soil ph soil quality climate change Soil acidity has recently reemerged as a priority topic in agricultural policy discussions in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most of the (still limited) existing data on soil acidity is focused on conditions in the top 20 cm of the soil profile. While addressing topsoil acidity is a logical starting point for most cropping systems affected by acidity-related production constraints, the potential importance of addressing subsoil acidity remains unclear. In the face of deepening seasonal weather variability associated with climate change, addressing subsoil acidity may be strategically important. In periods of water stress, staple crops such maize may develop deeper root systems to enhance water uptake capacity and thereby overcome drought related stress. Such capacities, however, may be severely curtailed by subsoil acidity which may impede root growth in the soil profile. This elevates the question from an esoteric soil science concern to a practical large-scale soil health management inquiry. However, because so little empirical work has been done to date on this topic, the strategic relevance of this adaptation pathway is not yet well understood. We outline the main conceptual issues of relevance to agricultural development, summarize the available information, and suggest priority areas for further empirical research within the region. 2024-11 2024-11-29T20:07:49Z 2024-11-29T20:07:49Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162896 en Open Access application/pdf EiA Silva, J.V., Sida, T.S., & Chamberlin, J. (2024). Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?. EIA. https://hdl.handle.net/10883/35084
spellingShingle subsoil
soil ph
soil quality
climate change
Silva, João Vasco
Sida, Tesfaye S.
Chamberlin, Jordan
Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title_full Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title_fullStr Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title_full_unstemmed Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title_short Subsoil acidity in sub-Saharan Africa: What relevance for the soil health investment agenda?
title_sort subsoil acidity in sub saharan africa what relevance for the soil health investment agenda
topic subsoil
soil ph
soil quality
climate change
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162896
work_keys_str_mv AT silvajoaovasco subsoilacidityinsubsaharanafricawhatrelevanceforthesoilhealthinvestmentagenda
AT sidatesfayes subsoilacidityinsubsaharanafricawhatrelevanceforthesoilhealthinvestmentagenda
AT chamberlinjordan subsoilacidityinsubsaharanafricawhatrelevanceforthesoilhealthinvestmentagenda