Abstract

Resilience of smallholder farmers in their ability to bounce-back and overcome shocks, such as drought, is critical to ensure a pathway out of hunger and poverty. Efficient water conservation methods that increase rainwater capture and reduce soil erosion such as stone lines and grass bands are two technologies that have been proposed to increase the resilience in Sudano–Sahelian farming systems. In Burkina Faso, we show that stone lines, grass bands, and crop rotation are effective resilience strategies individually and in combination. During years when rainfall is well-distributed over time, differences are minimal between fields with water conservation methods and fields without. However, when there are periods of prolonged drought, water conservation methods are effective for increasing soil water, yield, revenue, and resilience. During drought conditions, sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) grain yield and revenue with stone lines and grass bands were over 50% greater than that of the control, by an average of 450 kg ha−1, which amounted to an increase of 58,500 West African CFA franc (CFA) ha−1 (i.e., 98 USD ha−1). The results also suggest that the combination of water conservation method and crop rotation additionally improves cropping system productivity and revenue. Growing cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.) in rotation with sorghum production provided more options for farmers to increase their income and access to nutrition. This study also sheds light on the limited productivity gains due to improved crop varieties. The local sorghum landrace, Nongomsoba, and the local cowpea variety in rotation resulted in the highest yields as compared to the improved varieties of Sariaso 14 sorghum and KVX 396-4-4 cowpea. Under similar low input/degraded conditions, improved crop varieties likely are not a suitable resilience strategy alone. We conclude that during erratic rainy seasons with frequent periods of drought (i.e., water stress) in rain-fed conditions in Burkina Faso, stone lines or grass bands in combination with sorghum and cowpea rotation are effective practices for increasing resilience of smallholder farmers to maintain crop productivity and revenue. With future and present increases in climate variability due to climate change, stone lines, grass bands, and crop rotation will have growing importance as resilience strategies to buffer crop productivity and revenue during periods of drought.

Highlights

  • Soil degradation is a major constraint in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) [1]

  • We show that stone lines or grass bands and crop rotation are effective resilience strategies individually and in combination

  • This study showed that using stone lines or grass bands is effective in enhancing soil water content on degraded land

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Summary

Introduction

Soil degradation is a major constraint in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) [1]. Soil fertility is declining largely due to crop nutrient mining using traditional farming practices and soil erosion [2]. Water 2020, 12, 976 efforts to prioritize methods to improve soil fertility in West Africa have focused on system approaches that integrate inorganic and organic fertilizer approaches as well as socioeconomic considerations [3,4]. The removal of crop residues coupled with low soil-water holding capacity and low rates of fertilizer application significantly reduces the soil nutrient balance. In West Africa, 4.4 million tons of N are lost per year, and only 0.8 million tons of N are returned back to the soil [5].

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