Abstract

In the past half dozen years, farmers and professionals working with them in several Asian and African countries have begun adapting and extrapolating what they have learned from and about the system of rice intensification (SRI) to a range of other crops - finger millet, wheat, sugarcane, tef, oilseeds such as mustard, legumes such as soya and kidney beans, and various vegetables - in what is being called the system of crop intensification (SCI). As with rice, the principles of early and healthy plant establishment, reducing competition between plants, increased soil organic matter, active soil aeration, and the careful application of water are proving able to raise the productivity and profitability of differently-managed crops. Recent reports from the World Bank in India and the Agricultural Transformation Agency in Ethiopia show such changes in crop management improving food security and being scaled up with hundreds of thousands of farmers. This review article reports on the productivity and other impacts being observed for many different crops in half a dozen countries for increasing food crop yields with lower cost and input requirements as well as more resilience to adverse effects of climate change. It also reports on mechanization innovations that reduce labor requirements for these methods.

Highlights

  • In the past half dozen years, farmers and professionals working with them in several Asian and African countries have begun adapting and extrapolating what they have learned from and about the system of rice intensification (SRI) to a range of other crops - finger millet, wheat, sugarcane, tef, oilseeds such as mustard, legumes such as soya and kidney beans, and various vegetables - in what is being called the system of crop intensification (SCI)

  • We review in some detail three major food crops important for food security in Asia and parts of Africa - finger millet, wheat, and tef - because there is most information and data available on the effects of SCI management for these cereals

  • This review indicates that SCI is an evolving phenomenon, still a work in progress [47], not yet getting much attention in scientific journals

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Summary

Conclusions

This review indicates that SCI is an evolving phenomenon, still a work in progress [47], not yet getting much attention in scientific journals. While the data presented here are not complete or standardized enough for strong scientific conclusions, the patterns of yield and profitability improvement are dramatic and consistent enough to have attracted the attention of already millions of farmers and of policy makers, in Ethiopia and Bihar state of India [14,15] This information has been assembled to bring these opportunities to the attention of a wider audience that is concerned with improving agricultural production and food security, and one that desires to conserve environmental resources and help farmers cope with increasing climatic stresses and in the future.

Royal Society: Reaping the Benefits
10. Uphoff N: ed: Agroecological Innovations
14. Agricultural Transformation Agency
16. World Bank Institute
20. Uphoff N
22. SRI-Rice: The System of Crop Intensification
31. Styger E
34. Styger E
42. Baskaran P: STI
45. Lim S: Experiences in Multi-Purpose Farm Development
Findings
47. ILEIA: SRI
Full Text
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