Abstract

Present nutrient management recommendations for irrigated rice in West Africa are typically uniform for large regions. Even with optimal crop management, spatial variability of indigenous nutrient supplies may cause low fertilizer efficiency, low productivity of expensive inputs and high losses to the environment. Substantial efficiency increases were achieved with site- and season-specific nutrient management approaches, but the relative importance of different components (site or season) or of the precision level used (field, scheme, or region) remained unclear. We conducted a field trial in the Senegal River valley to investigate short-range variability of indigenous nutrient supplies of N (INS), P (IPS), and K (IKS) on a three hectare farm, and subsequently used the field data and simulation tools to study the agro-economic effects of fertilizer management options with different precision levels.

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