Abstract

West Africa (WA) is among the most food insecure regions. Rapid human population growth and stagnating crop yields greatly contribute to this fact. Poor soil fertility, especially low plant available phosphorus (P) is constraining food production in the region. P-fertilizer use in WA is among the lowest in the world due to inaccessibility and high prices, often unaffordable to resource-poor subsistence farmers. This article provides an overview of soil P-deficiency in WA and opportunities to overcome it by exploiting sorghum and pearl millet genetic diversity. The topic is examined from the perspectives of plant breeding, soil science, plant physiology, plant nutrition, and agronomy, thereby referring to recent results obtained in a joint interdisciplinary research project, and reported literature. Specific objectives are to summarize: (1) The global problem of P scarcity and how it will affect WA farmers; (2) Soil P dynamics in WA soils; (3) Plant responses to P deficiency; (4) Opportunities to breed for improved crop adaptation to P-limited conditions; (5) Challenges and trade-offs for improving sorghum and pearl millet adaptation to low-P conditions in WA; and (6) Systems approaches to address soil P-deficiency in WA. Sorghum and pearl millet in WA exhibit highly significant genetic variation for P-uptake efficiency, P-utilization efficiency, and grain yield under P-limited conditions indicating the possibility of breeding P-efficient varieties. Direct selection under P-limited conditions was more efficient than indirect selection under high-P conditions. Combining P-uptake and P-utilization efficiency is recommendable for WA to avoid further soil mining. Genomic regions responsible for P-uptake, P-utilization efficiency, and grain yield under low-P have been identified in WA sorghum and pearl millet, and marker-assisted selection could be possible once these genomic regions are validated. Developing P-efficient genotypes may not, however, be a sustainable solution in itself in the long-term without replenishing the P removed from the system in harvested produce. We therefore propose the use of integrated soil fertility management and systems-oriented management such as enhanced crop-tree-livestock integration in combination with P-use-efficiency-improved varieties. Recycling P from animal bones, human excreta and urine are also possible approaches toward a partially closed and efficient P cycle in WA.

Highlights

  • Much interest in food security has focused on depletion of nonrenewable energy and land resources

  • The overall P dynamics in the soil-plant system is a function of the integrating effects of P transformation, availability, and utilization driven by soil, rhizosphere and plant processes (Shen et al, 2011)

  • 36.6 n and Matusso, 2014). (iii) Humic substances can indirectly form complexes with the orthophosphates where the orthophosphates are bound by Al and Fe complexed by the humic substances to form humic-metal-P complexes (HMEP) and this form may account to between 50–80% of P in the soil solution (Gerke, 2010)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Much interest in food security has focused on depletion of nonrenewable energy and land resources. Nonacidulated rock phosphate could be used as a substitute source of P (Bationo and Mokwunye, 1991) but farmers have not widely adopted this technology because it often does not produce visible results in the first year and most rock phosphates are not suitable for direct application Given these conditions, breeding for crops which may produce higher yields under P-limited conditions appears to make an important contribution to an environmental friendly and economically feasible strategy in order to improve pearl millet and sorghum yields in WA under subsistence farmers’ conditions. P-limited conditions, with the aspects of existing genetic diversity, the question of direct versus indirect selection, availability of genomic tools to enhance phosphorus use efficiency in crops; (5) Challenges for improving sorghum and pearl millet adaptation to low-P conditions in WA, including lack of reliable screening procedures for accurate phenotyping and trade-offs between traits of interest; and (6) Systems approaches to address P deficiency in WA

SOIL PHOSPHORUS DYNAMICS
Standard deviation
Phosphorus Deficiency in West Africa
PLANT RESPONSES TO PHOSPHORUS DEFICIENCY
Availability of Genetic Variation
Genomic Tools for Enhancing Adaptation to Low Soil Phosphorus in Crops
SYSTEMS APPROACHES TO ADDRESSING THE PHOSPHORUS DEFICIENCY ISSUE IN WEST AFRICA
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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