On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa

Abstract Context Quantifying nutrient balances in cropping systems is critical for better nutrient management towards efficient and sustainable agriculture. However, information about nutrient balances for rice in major production systems is limited in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Objectives This study...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rakotoson, Tovohery, Johnson, Jean-Martial, Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu, Ibrahim, Ali, Saito, Kazuki
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172940
_version_ 1855543369862742016
author Rakotoson, Tovohery
Johnson, Jean-Martial
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Ibrahim, Ali
Saito, Kazuki
author_browse Ibrahim, Ali
Johnson, Jean-Martial
Rakotoson, Tovohery
Saito, Kazuki
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
author_facet Rakotoson, Tovohery
Johnson, Jean-Martial
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Ibrahim, Ali
Saito, Kazuki
author_sort Rakotoson, Tovohery
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Abstract Context Quantifying nutrient balances in cropping systems is critical for better nutrient management towards efficient and sustainable agriculture. However, information about nutrient balances for rice in major production systems is limited in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Objectives This study aimed to assess nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) balances in the three major rice production systems in SSA and their relationships with rice yield at different spatial levels. Methods On-farm survey of 1025 farmers’ fields in 32 sites within 19 countries across West, Central, and East Africa, and for three major rice production systems consisting of irrigated lowland, rainfed lowland, and rainfed upland were used to quantify the nutrient partial balances calculated as nutrient inputs minus outputs. Results The study found significant variations in N, P, and K partial balances across regions, countries, and production systems ranging from −209–220 kg ha−1 for N, −39–86 kg ha−1 for P, and −282–163 kg ha−1 for K. Production system was the main source of these variations, while region largely contributed to the P partial balance. The partial balance of all three nutrients was generally negative except for a few sites, with more negative P (70 %) and K (73 %) partial balances compared to the N partial balance (51 %). East Africa had the largest negative partial balances, except for Uganda. Rainfed upland rice was the least sustainable, with negative partial balances of 13, 1, and 13 kg ha−1 for N, P, and K, respectively. There were inconsistent relationships between grain yield and partial nutrient balance. Conclusions N, P, and K partial balances in rice production in SSA largely vary and are mostly outside of acceptable ranges. Irrigated lowland rice is the most sustainable. We identified clusters of combinations of sites and production systems based on yield and nutrient partial balance and suggested research and development strategies for improving yields and optimizing nutrient balances. Implications For comprehensive nutrient balance assessment, future studies should take into account variations in residue management, biological N fixation in lowland rice systems, and organic input.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace172940
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1729402025-10-26T13:02:45Z On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa Rakotoson, Tovohery Johnson, Jean-Martial Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu Ibrahim, Ali Saito, Kazuki Nutrient balance cropping systems nutrient management sustainable agriculture upland rice soil fertility Biological nitrogen fixation productivity Sub-Saharan Africa Abstract Context Quantifying nutrient balances in cropping systems is critical for better nutrient management towards efficient and sustainable agriculture. However, information about nutrient balances for rice in major production systems is limited in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Objectives This study aimed to assess nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) balances in the three major rice production systems in SSA and their relationships with rice yield at different spatial levels. Methods On-farm survey of 1025 farmers’ fields in 32 sites within 19 countries across West, Central, and East Africa, and for three major rice production systems consisting of irrigated lowland, rainfed lowland, and rainfed upland were used to quantify the nutrient partial balances calculated as nutrient inputs minus outputs. Results The study found significant variations in N, P, and K partial balances across regions, countries, and production systems ranging from −209–220 kg ha−1 for N, −39–86 kg ha−1 for P, and −282–163 kg ha−1 for K. Production system was the main source of these variations, while region largely contributed to the P partial balance. The partial balance of all three nutrients was generally negative except for a few sites, with more negative P (70 %) and K (73 %) partial balances compared to the N partial balance (51 %). East Africa had the largest negative partial balances, except for Uganda. Rainfed upland rice was the least sustainable, with negative partial balances of 13, 1, and 13 kg ha−1 for N, P, and K, respectively. There were inconsistent relationships between grain yield and partial nutrient balance. Conclusions N, P, and K partial balances in rice production in SSA largely vary and are mostly outside of acceptable ranges. Irrigated lowland rice is the most sustainable. We identified clusters of combinations of sites and production systems based on yield and nutrient partial balance and suggested research and development strategies for improving yields and optimizing nutrient balances. Implications For comprehensive nutrient balance assessment, future studies should take into account variations in residue management, biological N fixation in lowland rice systems, and organic input. 2025-03 2025-02-11T09:54:52Z 2025-02-11T09:54:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172940 en Limited Access Elsevier Rakotoson, Tovohery, Jean-Martial Johnson, Kalimuthu Senthilkumar, Ali Ibrahim, and Kazuki Saito. "On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa." Field Crops Research 322 (2025): 109714.
spellingShingle Nutrient balance
cropping systems
nutrient management
sustainable agriculture
upland rice
soil fertility
Biological nitrogen fixation
productivity
Sub-Saharan Africa
Rakotoson, Tovohery
Johnson, Jean-Martial
Senthilkumar, Kalimuthu
Ibrahim, Ali
Saito, Kazuki
On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title_fullStr On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title_short On-farm nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub-Saharan Africa
title_sort on farm nitrogen phosphorus and potassium partial balances in three major rice production systems in sub saharan africa
topic Nutrient balance
cropping systems
nutrient management
sustainable agriculture
upland rice
soil fertility
Biological nitrogen fixation
productivity
Sub-Saharan Africa
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172940
work_keys_str_mv AT rakotosontovohery onfarmnitrogenphosphorusandpotassiumpartialbalancesinthreemajorriceproductionsystemsinsubsaharanafrica
AT johnsonjeanmartial onfarmnitrogenphosphorusandpotassiumpartialbalancesinthreemajorriceproductionsystemsinsubsaharanafrica
AT senthilkumarkalimuthu onfarmnitrogenphosphorusandpotassiumpartialbalancesinthreemajorriceproductionsystemsinsubsaharanafrica
AT ibrahimali onfarmnitrogenphosphorusandpotassiumpartialbalancesinthreemajorriceproductionsystemsinsubsaharanafrica
AT saitokazuki onfarmnitrogenphosphorusandpotassiumpartialbalancesinthreemajorriceproductionsystemsinsubsaharanafrica