Abstract

Yam (Dioscorea spp.) is a tuber crop grown for food security, income generation, and traditional medicine. This crop has a high cultural value for some of the groups growing it. Most of the production comes from West Africa where the increased demand has been covered by enlarging cultivated surfaces while the mean yield remained around 10 t tuber ha−1. In West Africa, yam is traditionally cultivated without input as the first crop after a long-term fallow as it is considered to require a high soil fertility. African soils, however, are being more and more degraded. The aims of this review were to show the importance of soil fertility for yam, discuss barriers that might limit the adoption of integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) in yam-based systems in West Africa, present the concept of innovation platforms (IPs) as a tool to foster collaboration between actors for designing innovations in yam-based systems and provide recommendations for future research. This review shows that the development of sustainable, feasible, and acceptable soil management innovations for yam requires research to be conducted in interdisciplinary teams including natural and social sciences and in a transdisciplinary manner involving relevant actors from the problem definition, to the co-design of soil management innovations, the evaluation of research results, their communication and their implementation. Finally, this research should be conducted in diverse biophysical and socio-economic settings to develop generic rules on soil/plant relationships in yam as affected by soil management and on how to adjust the innovation supply to specific contexts.

Highlights

  • Yam (Dioscorea spp.) is a tuber crop grown by smallholders throughout the tropics (Andres et al, 2017)

  • This review discusses the importance of soil fertility for yam, barriers that might limit the adoption of integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) in yam-based systems in West Africa, and the concept of innovation platforms (IPs) as a tool for designing innovations in yam-based systems before providing recommendations for future research

  • We consider here soil fertility to be the result of the combination between soil properties and crop management on plant growth and tuber yield (Sebillotte, 1989; Patzel et al, 2000)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Yam (Dioscorea spp.) is a tuber crop grown by smallholders throughout the tropics (Andres et al, 2017). Besides being a staple consumed by 155 million people, yam is grown as a cash crop and a medicinal plant (Lebot, 2009; Sangakkara and Frossard, 2014) and has a high cultural value for some of the groups growing it (Coursey, 1981). West Africa produced 62 million tons of tuber (91% of world production) in 2014 (FAOSTAT, 2016). Yam is traditionally planted as the first crop, after a long-term fallow as it is considered to be demanding in terms of soil fertility (Carsky et al, 2010). Lebot (2009) reports that producers perceive soil fertility decline as a key constraint for yam production in areas under intensive use. This review discusses the importance of soil fertility for yam, barriers that might limit the adoption of integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) in yam-based systems in West Africa, and the concept of innovation platforms (IPs) as a tool for designing innovations in yam-based systems before providing recommendations for future research

IMPORTANCE OF SOIL FERTILITY FOR YAM PRODUCTION
Western Nigeria
French West
SYSTEMS OF WEST AFRICA
ACTORS FOR DESIGNING INNOVATIONS
Findings
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE
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