Abstract

Poor agricultural productivity has led to food shortages for smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. Agroforestry may improve food security by increasing soil fertility, crop production, and livelihoods. Agroforestry simulation models can be useful for predicting the effects of tree management on crop growth when designing modifications to these systems. The Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator (APSIM) agroforestry tree-proxy model was used to simulate the response of maize yield to N fertilizer applications and tree pruning practices in the parkland agroforestry system in the Central Rift Valley, Ethiopia. The model was parameterized and tested using data collected from an experiment conducted under trees and in crop-only plots during the 2015 and 2016 growing seasons. The treatments contained three levels of tree pruning (100% pruned, 50% pruned, and unpruned) as the main plots, and N fertilizers were applied to maize at two rates (9 or 78 kg N ha−1) as sub-plots. Maize yield predictions across two years in response to tree pruning and N applications under tree canopies were satisfactorily simulated (NSE = 0.72, RSR = 0.51, R2 = 0.8). Virtual experiments for different rates of N, pruning levels, sowing dates, and cultivars suggest that maize yield could be improved by applying fertilizers (particularly on crop-only plots) and by at least 50% pruning of trees. Optimal maize yield can be obtained at a higher rate of fertilization under trees than away from them due to better water relations, and there is scope for improving the sowing date and cultivar. Across a 34-year range of recent climate, small increases in yields due to optimum N-fertilizing and pruning were probably limited by nutrient limitations other than N, but the highest yields were consistently in the 2–4 m zone under trees. These virtual experiments helped to form hypotheses regarding fertilizers, pruning, and the effects of trees on soil that warrant further field evaluation.

Highlights

  • Crop production in Ethiopia and other sub-Saharan Africa countries is strongly affected by low levels of soil fertility [1,2] as well as inadequate or poorly distributed rainfall [3,4]

  • Growing crops with leguminous trees in the parklands of Ethiopia, where scattered mature trees occur as an integral part of crop and livestock production landscapes, could potentially provide sustainable and affordable strategies to improve crop productivity and livelihoods for smallholder farmers with limited access to N fertilizer [9]

  • The parkland is in the Central Rift Valley (CRV) in Ethiopia, located approximately 104 km southeast of Addis Ababa [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Crop production in Ethiopia and other sub-Saharan Africa countries is strongly affected by low levels of soil fertility [1,2] as well as inadequate or poorly distributed rainfall [3,4]. Maize accounts for 27% of Ethiopia’s total cereal production and is critical for the food security of smallholder subsistence farmers [5]. Forests 2020, 11, 1175 that the maize yield there could be increased by improving nutrient and water availability to the crops. Growing crops with leguminous trees in the parklands of Ethiopia, where scattered mature trees occur as an integral part of crop and livestock production landscapes, could potentially provide sustainable and affordable strategies to improve crop productivity and livelihoods for smallholder farmers with limited access to N fertilizer [9]

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