Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria

Most upland soils in humid and sub-humid tropical Africa are characterized by low inherent fertility and are also susceptible to soil erosion and compaction with cultivation. Based on simulation model, this study uses a capital budgeting approach to determine the profitability of alternative land us...

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Main Authors: Ehui, Simeon K., Kang, B.T., Spencer, D.S.C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28117
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author Ehui, Simeon K.
Kang, B.T.
Spencer, D.S.C.
author_browse Ehui, Simeon K.
Kang, B.T.
Spencer, D.S.C.
author_facet Ehui, Simeon K.
Kang, B.T.
Spencer, D.S.C.
author_sort Ehui, Simeon K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Most upland soils in humid and sub-humid tropical Africa are characterized by low inherent fertility and are also susceptible to soil erosion and compaction with cultivation. Based on simulation model, this study uses a capital budgeting approach to determine the profitability of alternative land use systems, taking into account the short and long-run impact of soil erosion on agricultural productivity in southwestern Nigeria. The fallow systems include: (1) two continuous cultivation alley cropping systems with leucaena hedgerows planted at 2 m and 4 m interhedgerows spacings: (2) the continuous cultivation no-till farming system; and (3) two traditional bush fallow systems with a 3-year cropping period in 6- and 12-year cycles. Under a 10 percent discount rate, when no yield penalties are imposed (reflecting the case of population density), the 12-year cycle shifting cultivation system is most profitable, followed by the 4 m alley cropping, the no-till, the 2 m alley cropping and the 6-year cycle shifting cultivation systems. When penalties are imposed on yields due to land being taken out of production because of fallow vegetation (reflecting the case of rising land values), the 4 m alley cropping is most profitable, followed by the no-till, the 2 m alley cropping, the 12- and 6-year cycle bush fallow systems. Thus where access to new forest land is ‘costless’, slight yield from erosion will not detract significantly from the immediate profit advantage of traditional bush fallow systems, with longer fallow periods.
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spelling CGSpace281172024-04-25T06:01:55Z Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria Ehui, Simeon K. Kang, B.T. Spencer, D.S.C. alley farming cropping systems soil erosion fallow systems bushlands economic analysis land use yields prices production costs Most upland soils in humid and sub-humid tropical Africa are characterized by low inherent fertility and are also susceptible to soil erosion and compaction with cultivation. Based on simulation model, this study uses a capital budgeting approach to determine the profitability of alternative land use systems, taking into account the short and long-run impact of soil erosion on agricultural productivity in southwestern Nigeria. The fallow systems include: (1) two continuous cultivation alley cropping systems with leucaena hedgerows planted at 2 m and 4 m interhedgerows spacings: (2) the continuous cultivation no-till farming system; and (3) two traditional bush fallow systems with a 3-year cropping period in 6- and 12-year cycles. Under a 10 percent discount rate, when no yield penalties are imposed (reflecting the case of population density), the 12-year cycle shifting cultivation system is most profitable, followed by the 4 m alley cropping, the no-till, the 2 m alley cropping and the 6-year cycle shifting cultivation systems. When penalties are imposed on yields due to land being taken out of production because of fallow vegetation (reflecting the case of rising land values), the 4 m alley cropping is most profitable, followed by the no-till, the 2 m alley cropping, the 12- and 6-year cycle bush fallow systems. Thus where access to new forest land is ‘costless’, slight yield from erosion will not detract significantly from the immediate profit advantage of traditional bush fallow systems, with longer fallow periods. 1990-01 2013-05-06T06:59:57Z 2013-05-06T06:59:57Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28117 en Limited Access Elsevier Ehui, S. K., Kang, B. T., & Spencer, D. S. C. (1990). Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping, no-till and bush fallow systems in South Western Nigeria. In Agricultural Systems (Vol. 34, Issue 4, pp. 349–368). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/0308-521x(90)90013-g
spellingShingle alley farming
cropping systems
soil erosion
fallow systems
bushlands
economic analysis
land use
yields
prices
production costs
Ehui, Simeon K.
Kang, B.T.
Spencer, D.S.C.
Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title_full Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title_fullStr Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title_short Economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping. No-till and bush fallow systems in south west Nigeria
title_sort economic analysis of soil erosion effects in alley cropping no till and bush fallow systems in south west nigeria
topic alley farming
cropping systems
soil erosion
fallow systems
bushlands
economic analysis
land use
yields
prices
production costs
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28117
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