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Western and Central Africa (Niamey, Niger)
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Collaborative Project of JIRCAS and ICRISAT
Project Leader: Ryoichi Matsunaga, ICRISAT, Niamey, Niger
Food security in the semi-arid zone of West Africa is most severely threatened.
The basic agricultural system in the region is agro-pastoral. The sandy soils in the
semi-arid tropical Africa have a minimal content of nutrient-retaining medium, ie, clay.
In such soils, organic matter (OM) plays an important role as the source and the retention
medium of soil fertility. The supply of OM such as crop residues and manure is very limited,
especially during the dry season. Short-term solutions have mostly been sought especially for the agriculture-related problems in Africa. As a result, fundamental research issues such as the dynamics and the retention of organic nitrogen in soils, and the nature of the interaction between organic and inorganic fertilizers have not been thoroughly addressed. To overcome this problem, the Japan International Research Centre for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) has initiated a collaborative project with ICRISAT.
JIRCAS Sahelian Team in the village.
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Evaluation of indigenous and exotic plant genetic resources (PGR) from the view point of soil fertility preservation such as biomass production as a source of OM, acquisition of hardly available nutrients, and prevention of soil degradation, nitrogen-fixing ability, is also important to implement the proposed project.
Cattle transport plant nutrients
from the
rangelands/fallow lands to the crop fields in the Sahel.
Prediction of optimum strategies for OM management, a model integrating OM dynamics into plant nutrient dynamics, enhanced PGR utilization for optimized OM management, and improved organic matter and nutrient use efficiency in crop and livestock systems are important research spillovers.
Organic resources applied to the farm lands; Cow dung (left), millet residues
(middle) and farmyard manure (right) in the Sahel.
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