improving land and water management: creating a sustainable food future, installment 4

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October 2013 Craig Hanson, Steward, World Resources Report Photo Source: Chris Reij IMPROVING LAND AND WATER MANAGEMENT Installment 4 of “Creating a Sustainable Food Future”

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An examination of the role of four improved land and water management practices and the effect they could have on smallholder crop yields and livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa. We then provide a series of recommendations for how to scale up these practices.

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Page 1: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

October 2013

Craig Hanson, Steward, World Resources Report Photo Source: Chris Reij

IMPROVING LAND AND WATER MANAGEMENTInstallment 4 of “Creating a Sustainable Food Future”

Page 2: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: Henao and Baanante, 2006.

Several regions in Africa have relatively high rates ofnutrient depletion on agricultural landsAnnual nutrient depletion, kg NPK/ha/year

Page 3: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: Hengl and Reuter, 2009.

Soils in Africa are relatively low in organic carbonTopsoil organic carbon, percent mass fraction

Page 4: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Sub-Saharan Africa uses much less fertilizer per hectare than any other regionKilograms per hectare

Source: IFDC, 2013.

Page 5: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Cereal yields in Sub-Saharan Africa are much lower than other regionsMetric tons per hectare

Source: Derived from FAO data; graph by IFDC.

Page 6: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

From 1961–2001, food production increases in Sub-Saharan Africa were achieved mainly by expanding the area of cropland

Source: Henao and Baanante, 2006.

Note: Baseline data in 1961 is given the value of 100; subsequent data for yield and area are in units of percent change relative to 1961.

Page 7: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: Shitumbanuma, 2012.

Maize yields in Zambia are higher under Faidherbia treesKilograms per hectare

Note: Average maize grain yields from trial sites under and outside canopies of mature Faidherbia albida trees across regions in Zambia.

Page 8: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Conservation agriculture is widely used in many continents, but not in Africa

Source: Shitumbanuma, 2012.

Page 9: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Conservation agriculture with intercropping of Faidherbia albida trees (agroforestry) in Malawi

Source: Bunderson, 2012.

Page 10: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Conservation agriculture increased maize yields in Malawi in 2011, and combining it with agroforestry (intercropping of Faidherbia trees) increased yields even further Metric tons per hectare

Source: Bunderson, 2012.

Page 11: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

A combination of water harvesting practices increases grain yields more than one practice (Burkina Faso)Kilograms per hectare

Source: Sawadogo, 2008.

Note: These two groups of villages are located on the northern central plateau of Burkina Faso. “BAU” = business as usual

Page 12: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: Mazvimavi et al., 2008.

Water harvesting combined with conservation agriculture increases gross margins for farmers in ZimbabweGross margins, US$ per hectare

Note: Data from nine districts in Zimbabwe, across rainfall zones.

Page 13: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: Sawadogo, 2012.

Micro-dosing further increases sorghum yields beyond other land and water management practices (Burkina Faso, 2009–11)Kilograms per hectare

Page 14: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: IFDC, 2011.

ISFM contributed to yield increases of three major crops for farmers in West Africa, 2006–10Kilograms per hectare

Note: No 2006 data was available for maize.

Page 15: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: IFDC, 2011.

Revenues increased significantly for farmers adopting ISFM in West Africa, 2006–10US$ per hectare

Note: No 2006 data was available or groundnuts. Data converted from CFA francs using a conversion rate of 1 CFA franc = .0021 US Dollar.

Page 16: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: IFDC, 2012.

Farmers in Central Africa benefited greatly from increased crop yields and revenues following the adoption of ISFM practicesAnnual benefits

Page 17: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Integrated landscape approaches take account of the importance of ecosystem services in managing agricultural landscapes

Page 18: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Success in scaling up improved land and water management requires attention to gender

• Women are responsible for 80 percent of agricultural work

• Labor inputs of women exceed those of men by 10-12 hours a week

• 95 percent of external resources (seeds, tools) are channeled to men

• Women often do not have the same rights and management authority as men

• Add photo to illustrate importance of gender

Source: De Sarker, 2011. Photo: Chris Reij.

Page 19: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Source: WRI, 2013.

Agroforestry and water harvesting could be scaled up on more than 300 million hectares in Sub-Saharan Africa

Page 20: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Increase communication and outreach

Photo Source: Chris Reij.

Page 21: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Support institutional and policy reforms

Photo Source: Reseau MARP Burkina.  

Page 22: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Support capacity building

Photo Source: Chris Reij.

Page 23: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

Mainstream investing in improved land and water management

Photo Source: Attari Boukar.

Page 24: Improving Land and Water Management: Creating a Sustainable Food Future, Installment 4

For more information:WRI.org/WRR