Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status

Strong gradients of decreasing soil fertility are found with increasing distance from the homestead within smallholder African farms, due to differential resource allocation. As nutrient use efficiency varies strongly along these gradients, such heterogeneity must be considered when designing soil m...

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Autores principales: Tittonell, Pablo A., Vanlauwe, Bernard, Leffelaar, P.A., Shepherd, Keith D., Giller, Kenneth E.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42841
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author Tittonell, Pablo A.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Leffelaar, P.A.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Giller, Kenneth E.
author_browse Giller, Kenneth E.
Leffelaar, P.A.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Tittonell, Pablo A.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_facet Tittonell, Pablo A.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Leffelaar, P.A.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Giller, Kenneth E.
author_sort Tittonell, Pablo A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Strong gradients of decreasing soil fertility are found with increasing distance from the homestead within smallholder African farms, due to differential resource allocation. As nutrient use efficiency varies strongly along these gradients, such heterogeneity must be considered when designing soil management strategies, aimed at an improved overall resource use efficiency at farm scale. Here, we quantify the magnitude and study the origin of farmer-induced, within-farm soil fertility gradients as affected by biophysical and socio-economic conditions, and investigate farmers’ perceptions of such heterogeneity. Farm transects, participatory resource flow mapping, farmers’ classification of land qualities, and soil sampling for both chemical and spectral reflectance analyses were performed across 60 farms in three sub-locations (Emuhaia, Shinyalu, Aludeka) representing the variability found in the highlands of western Kenya. Differences between the various field types of a farm were observed for input use (e.g. 0.7–104 kg N ha?1), food production (e.g. 0.6–2.9 t DM ha?1), partial C (e.g. ?570 to 1480 kg ha?1) and N (e.g. ?92 to 57 kg ha?1) balances and general soil fertility status, despite strong differences across sub-locations. Concentration of nutrients in the home fields compared with the remote fields were verified for extractable P (e.g. 2.1–19.8 mg kg?1) and secondarily for exchangeable K (e.g. 0.14–0.54 cmol(+) kg?1), on average, whereas differences for soil C and N were only important when considering each individual farm separately. Farmers managed their fields according to their perceived land quality, varying the timing and intensity of management practices along soil fertility gradients. Fields classified by them as poor were planted later (up to 33.6 days of delay), with sparser crops (ca. 30% less plants m?2) and had higher weed infestation levels than those classified as fertile, leading to important differences in maize yield (e.g. 0.9 versus 2.4 t ha?1). The internal heterogeneity in resource allocation varied also between farms of different social classes, according to their objectives and factor constraints. Additionally, the interaction of sub-location-specific socio-economic (population, markets) and biophysical factors (soilscape variability) determined the patterns of resource allocation to different activities. Such interactions need to be considered for the characterisation of farming system to facilitate targeting research and development interventions to address the problem of poor soil fertility.
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spelling CGSpace428412024-01-17T12:58:34Z Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status Tittonell, Pablo A. Vanlauwe, Bernard Leffelaar, P.A. Shepherd, Keith D. Giller, Kenneth E. soil fertility farmers participation surveys small farms fertilidad del suelo agricultores participación encuestas explotación en pequeña escala Strong gradients of decreasing soil fertility are found with increasing distance from the homestead within smallholder African farms, due to differential resource allocation. As nutrient use efficiency varies strongly along these gradients, such heterogeneity must be considered when designing soil management strategies, aimed at an improved overall resource use efficiency at farm scale. Here, we quantify the magnitude and study the origin of farmer-induced, within-farm soil fertility gradients as affected by biophysical and socio-economic conditions, and investigate farmers’ perceptions of such heterogeneity. Farm transects, participatory resource flow mapping, farmers’ classification of land qualities, and soil sampling for both chemical and spectral reflectance analyses were performed across 60 farms in three sub-locations (Emuhaia, Shinyalu, Aludeka) representing the variability found in the highlands of western Kenya. Differences between the various field types of a farm were observed for input use (e.g. 0.7–104 kg N ha?1), food production (e.g. 0.6–2.9 t DM ha?1), partial C (e.g. ?570 to 1480 kg ha?1) and N (e.g. ?92 to 57 kg ha?1) balances and general soil fertility status, despite strong differences across sub-locations. Concentration of nutrients in the home fields compared with the remote fields were verified for extractable P (e.g. 2.1–19.8 mg kg?1) and secondarily for exchangeable K (e.g. 0.14–0.54 cmol(+) kg?1), on average, whereas differences for soil C and N were only important when considering each individual farm separately. Farmers managed their fields according to their perceived land quality, varying the timing and intensity of management practices along soil fertility gradients. Fields classified by them as poor were planted later (up to 33.6 days of delay), with sparser crops (ca. 30% less plants m?2) and had higher weed infestation levels than those classified as fertile, leading to important differences in maize yield (e.g. 0.9 versus 2.4 t ha?1). The internal heterogeneity in resource allocation varied also between farms of different social classes, according to their objectives and factor constraints. Additionally, the interaction of sub-location-specific socio-economic (population, markets) and biophysical factors (soilscape variability) determined the patterns of resource allocation to different activities. Such interactions need to be considered for the characterisation of farming system to facilitate targeting research and development interventions to address the problem of poor soil fertility. 2005 2014-09-24T07:58:39Z 2014-09-24T07:58:39Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42841 en Open Access
spellingShingle soil fertility
farmers
participation
surveys
small farms
fertilidad del suelo
agricultores
participación
encuestas
explotación en pequeña escala
Tittonell, Pablo A.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Leffelaar, P.A.
Shepherd, Keith D.
Giller, Kenneth E.
Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title_full Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title_fullStr Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title_full_unstemmed Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title_short Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya. II. Within-farm variability in resource allocation, nutrient flows and soil fertility status
title_sort exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western kenya ii within farm variability in resource allocation nutrient flows and soil fertility status
topic soil fertility
farmers
participation
surveys
small farms
fertilidad del suelo
agricultores
participación
encuestas
explotación en pequeña escala
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/42841
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