Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress

Nutrient balances are useful tools as indicators of potential land degradation and for optimizing nutrient use, and are thus highly relevant in the African context. A comprehensive literature review on nutrient balances in Africa was carried out to illustrate the main approaches, challenges, and pro...

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Autores principales: Cobo Borrero, Juan G., Dercon, G., Cadisch, Georg
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43897
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author Cobo Borrero, Juan G.
Dercon, G.
Cadisch, Georg
author_browse Cadisch, Georg
Cobo Borrero, Juan G.
Dercon, G.
author_facet Cobo Borrero, Juan G.
Dercon, G.
Cadisch, Georg
author_sort Cobo Borrero, Juan G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Nutrient balances are useful tools as indicators of potential land degradation and for optimizing nutrient use, and are thus highly relevant in the African context. A comprehensive literature review on nutrient balances in Africa was carried out to illustrate the main approaches, challenges, and progress, with emphasis on issues of scale. The review showed nutrient balances being widely used across the continent. The collected dataset from 57 peer-reviewed studies indicated, however, that most of the balances were calculated at plot and farm scale, and generated in East Africa. Data confirmed the expected trend of negative balances in the continent for nitrogen and potassium, where >75% of selected studies had mean values below zero. For phosphorus only 56% of studies showed negative mean balances. Several cases with positive nutrient balances indicated that soil nutrient mining cannot be generalized across the continent. Land use systems of wealthier farmers mostly presented higher nitrogen and phosphorus balances than systems of poorer farmers (p < 0.001). Plots located close to homesteads also usually presented higher balances than plots located relatively farther away (p < 0.05). Partial nutrient balances were significantly higher (p < 0.001) than full balances calculated for the same systems, but the later carried more uncertainties. The change in magnitude of nutrient balances from plot to continental level did not show any noticeable trend, which challenges prevailing assumptions that an increasing trend exists. However, methodological differences made a proper inter-scale comparison of results difficult. Actually, the review illustrated the high diversity of methods used to calculate nutrient balances and highlighted the main pit-falls, especially when nutrient flows and balances were scaled-up. Major generic problems were the arbitrary inclusion/exclusion of flows from the calculations, short evaluation periods, and difficulties on setting of spatial-temporal boundaries, inclusion of lateral flows, and linking the balances to soil nutrient stocks. The need for properly describing the methods used and reporting the estimates (i.e. appropriate units and measure of variability and error) were also highlighted. Main challenges during scaling-up were related to the type of aggregation and internalization of nutrient flows, as well as issues of non-linearity, and spatial variability, resolution and extent, which have not been properly addressed yet. In fact, gathered information showed that despite some few initiatives, scaling-up methods are still incipient. Lastly, promising technologies and recommendations to deal with these challenges were presented to assist in future research on nutrient balances at different spatial scales in Africa and worldwide.
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spelling CGSpace438972025-11-12T05:58:23Z Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress Cobo Borrero, Juan G. Dercon, G. Cadisch, Georg aggregation internalization methodological differences nutrient budgets nutrient flows nitrogen phosphorus potassium spatial scales scaling-up Nutrient balances are useful tools as indicators of potential land degradation and for optimizing nutrient use, and are thus highly relevant in the African context. A comprehensive literature review on nutrient balances in Africa was carried out to illustrate the main approaches, challenges, and progress, with emphasis on issues of scale. The review showed nutrient balances being widely used across the continent. The collected dataset from 57 peer-reviewed studies indicated, however, that most of the balances were calculated at plot and farm scale, and generated in East Africa. Data confirmed the expected trend of negative balances in the continent for nitrogen and potassium, where >75% of selected studies had mean values below zero. For phosphorus only 56% of studies showed negative mean balances. Several cases with positive nutrient balances indicated that soil nutrient mining cannot be generalized across the continent. Land use systems of wealthier farmers mostly presented higher nitrogen and phosphorus balances than systems of poorer farmers (p < 0.001). Plots located close to homesteads also usually presented higher balances than plots located relatively farther away (p < 0.05). Partial nutrient balances were significantly higher (p < 0.001) than full balances calculated for the same systems, but the later carried more uncertainties. The change in magnitude of nutrient balances from plot to continental level did not show any noticeable trend, which challenges prevailing assumptions that an increasing trend exists. However, methodological differences made a proper inter-scale comparison of results difficult. Actually, the review illustrated the high diversity of methods used to calculate nutrient balances and highlighted the main pit-falls, especially when nutrient flows and balances were scaled-up. Major generic problems were the arbitrary inclusion/exclusion of flows from the calculations, short evaluation periods, and difficulties on setting of spatial-temporal boundaries, inclusion of lateral flows, and linking the balances to soil nutrient stocks. The need for properly describing the methods used and reporting the estimates (i.e. appropriate units and measure of variability and error) were also highlighted. Main challenges during scaling-up were related to the type of aggregation and internalization of nutrient flows, as well as issues of non-linearity, and spatial variability, resolution and extent, which have not been properly addressed yet. In fact, gathered information showed that despite some few initiatives, scaling-up methods are still incipient. Lastly, promising technologies and recommendations to deal with these challenges were presented to assist in future research on nutrient balances at different spatial scales in Africa and worldwide. 2010-02-15 2014-10-02T08:32:54Z 2014-10-02T08:32:54Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43897 en Limited Access application/pdf Elsevier
spellingShingle aggregation
internalization
methodological differences
nutrient budgets
nutrient flows
nitrogen
phosphorus
potassium
spatial scales
scaling-up
Cobo Borrero, Juan G.
Dercon, G.
Cadisch, Georg
Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title_full Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title_fullStr Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title_full_unstemmed Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title_short Nutrient balances in African land use systems across different spatial scales: a review of approaches, challenges and progress
title_sort nutrient balances in african land use systems across different spatial scales a review of approaches challenges and progress
topic aggregation
internalization
methodological differences
nutrient budgets
nutrient flows
nitrogen
phosphorus
potassium
spatial scales
scaling-up
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43897
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AT dercong nutrientbalancesinafricanlandusesystemsacrossdifferentspatialscalesareviewofapproacheschallengesandprogress
AT cadischgeorg nutrientbalancesinafricanlandusesystemsacrossdifferentspatialscalesareviewofapproacheschallengesandprogress