Abstract

Crop-livestock farms across Africa are highly variable due to in agroecological and socioeconomic factors, the latter shaping the demand and supply of livestock products. Crop-livestock farms in Africa in the 21st century are very different from most mixed farms elsewhere in the world. African crop-livestock farms are smaller in size, have fewer livestock, lower productivity and less dependency on imported feed than farms in most countries of Europe, the Americas and the intensive agricultural systems of Asia. This paper discusses the role African crop-livestock farms have in the broader socio-agricultural economy, and how these are likely to change adapting to pressures brought on by the intensification of food systems. This intensification implies increasing land productivity (more food per hectare), often leading to more livestock heads per farm, producing fertilized feeds in croplands and importing feed supplements from the market. This discussion includes (1) the links between crop yields, soil fertility and crop-livestock integration, (2) the increasing demand for livestock products and the land resources required to meet to this demand, and (3) the opportunities to integrate broader societal goals into the development of crop-livestock farms. There is ample room for development of crop-livestock farms in Africa, and keeping integration as part of the development will help prevent many of the mistakes and environmental problems related to the intensification of livestock production observed elsewhere in the world. This development can integrate biodiversity, climate change adaptation and mitigation to the current goals of increasing productivity and food security. The inclusion of broader goals could help farmers access the level of finance required to implement changes.

Highlights

  • Crop-livestock farms across Africa are highly variable due to in agroecological and socioeconomic factors, the latter shaping the demand and supply of livestock products

  • This paper discusses the role African crop-livestock farms have in the broader socio-agricultural economy, and how these are likely to change adapting to pressures brought on by the intensification of food systems

  • This intensification implies increasing land productivity, often leading to more livestock heads per farm, producing fertilized feeds in croplands and importing feed supplements from the market. This discussion includes (1) the links between crop yields, soil fertility and crop-livestock integration, (2) the increasing demand for livestock products and the land resources required to meet to this demand, and (3) the opportunities to integrate broader societal goals into the development of crop-livestock farms

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Summary

THE SOIL FERTILITY QUEST

Low crop yields (below 1 t$ha–1) and low fertilizer use are still a widespread reality in Africa. In view of the risk associated with intensification, future crop-livestock farms must be integrated, aiming to close nutrient cycles by (1) efficiently using the biomass produced and recycling all livestock waste, (2) ensuring that stocking rates do not exceed the productive capacity of the land, and (3) avoiding the import of excessive amounts of feeds that create farm and regional economic dependencies, which should be feasible due to their small scale. Avoiding these imports is important as farms and regions that are heavily reliant on imported feed are more exposed to market fluctuations and supply chains vulnerabilities. The intensive system is often more efficient to produce food, but without effective policy, it creates problems with surpluses in farm and regional nutrient budgets

DEMAND FOR LIVESTOCK
INTEGRATING BROADER GOALS TO
OUTLOOK
Compliance with ethics guidelines
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