Abstract

Poor soils are a major cause of poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, and thus restoration of soil fertility is a significant challenge for sustainable agriculture. Some of the main resources required, e.g. phosphate and lime, are present in many African countries and can be used by smallholder farmers in a relatively unprocessed form instead of expensive commercial fertilisers. Here we present a small study of the Mbeya region in Tanzania, which locally has both phosphate and lime. Most soils in sub-Saharan Africa are losing nutrients necessary for sustainable agriculture. This is mainly due to intensive farming and the fact that the nutrients are not replaced adequately. Further reasons for nutrient losses are leaching, soil erosion and fixation by iron and aluminium oxides. Vast areas experience moderate to acute phosphorus deficiency (Vanlauwe & Giller 2006). The Mbeya region in south-western Tanzania (Fig. 1) is characterised by intensive smallholder plots along with several local sources of phosphate-bearing rocks and limestone. The former were examined in the 1980s (Chesworth et al.1988, 1989), but have never been utilised (Kalvig et al. 2010).

Highlights

  • Poor soils are a major cause of poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, and restoration of soil fertility is a significant challenge for sustainable agriculture

  • Most soils in sub-Saharan Africa are losing nutrients necessary for sustainable agriculture. This is mainly due to intensive farming and the fact that the nutrients are not replaced adequately

  • Vast areas experience moderate to acute phosphorus deficiency (Vanlauwe & Giller 2006)

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Summary

Lake Nyasa

The primary reason for increasing the soil pH by liming is to reduce the aluminium toxicity to plants, and to ensure that Ca, Mg, K and P are available to the plant. Raising the pH value to 5.2–5.5 is adequate for increasing crop yields, whereas higher values reduce the breakdown of rock phosphate (Mitchell 2005)

Phosphate and lime resources in the Mbeya region
Proterozoic fold belts Archaean craton
Findings
Proposals for feasibility studies
Full Text
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