Abstract

ABSTRACTLow and declining soil fertility has been recognized for a long time as a major impediment to intensifying agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Consequently, from the inception of international agricultural research, centres operating in SSA have had a research programme focusing on soil and soil fertility management, including the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA). The scope, content, and approaches of soil and soil fertility management research have changed over the past decades in response to lessons learnt and internal and external drivers and this paper uses IITA as a case study to document and analyse the consequences of strategic decisions taken on technology development, validation, and ultimately uptake by smallholder farmers in SSA. After an initial section describing the external environment within which soil and soil fertility management research is operating, various dimensions of this research area are covered: (i) ‘strategic research’, ‘Research for Development’, partnerships, and balancing acts, (ii) changing role of characterization due to the expansion in geographical scope and shift from soils to farms and livelihoods, (iii) technology development: changes in vision, content, and scale of intervention, (iv) technology validation and delivery to farming communities, and (v) impact and feedback to the technology development and validation process. Each of the above sections follows a chronological approach, covering the last five decades (from the late 1960s till today). The paper ends with a number of lessons learnt which could be considered for future initiatives aiming at developing and delivering improved soil and soil fertility management practices to smallholder farming communities in SSA.

Highlights

  • Some improvement in agricultural productivity has occurred during the past decades in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), population growth and rising food demand continues to outpace productivity growth (e.g. Alobo Loison, 2015; Badiane & Collins, 2016)

  • Declining soil fertility was already highlighted decades ago as a major bottleneck to sustained agricultural production (Greenland, 1995; Nye & Greenland, 1964; Sanchez, 1976), so it does not come as a surprise that the initial research envelope of the International Agricultural Research Centres (IARCs), such as the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), contained a programme focusing on soil and soil fertility management

  • Feedback from a level 3 impact study, carried out in 2007 in the context of the project on ‘Promoting Sustainable Agriculture in Borno’ (PROSAB) project, promoting the integrated use of fertilizers and cerealgrain legume rotation using several on-farm demonstrations to manage the declining soil fertility in northeast Nigeria, indicated that most smallholder farmers are not able to use a combination of technologies as promoted (Amaza, 2016; Bamire et al, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Some improvement in agricultural productivity has occurred during the past decades in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), population growth and rising food demand continues to outpace productivity growth (e.g. Alobo Loison, 2015; Badiane & Collins, 2016).

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