International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability (Jan 2018)

System of crop intensification for more productive, resource-conserving, climate-resilient, and sustainable agriculture: experience with diverse crops in varying agroecologies

  • Prabhakar Adhikari,
  • Hailu Araya,
  • Gerald Aruna,
  • Arun Balamatti,
  • Soumik Banerjee,
  • P. Baskaran,
  • B. C. Barah,
  • Debaraj Behera,
  • Tareke Berhe,
  • Parag Boruah,
  • Shiva Dhar,
  • Sue Edwards,
  • Mark Fulford,
  • Biksham Gujja,
  • Harouna Ibrahim,
  • Humayun Kabir,
  • Amir Kassam,
  • Ram B. Khadka,
  • Y. S. Koma,
  • U. S. Natarajan,
  • Rena Perez,
  • Debashish Sen,
  • Asif Sharif,
  • Gurpreet Singh,
  • Erika Styger,
  • Amod K. Thakur,
  • Anoop Tiwari,
  • Norman Uphoff,
  • Anil Verma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2017.1402504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 28

Abstract

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With continually increasing demand for food accompanied by the constraints of climate change and the availability and quality of soil and water, the world’s farmers are challenged to produce more food per hectare with less water, and with fewer agrochemical inputs if possible. The ideas and methods of the system of rice intensification which is improving irrigated rice production are now being extended/adapted to many other crops: wheat, maize, finger millet, sugarcane, tef, mustard, legumes, vegetables, and even spices. Promoting better root growth and enhancing the soil’s fertility with organic materials are being found effective means for raising the yields of many crop plants with less water, less fertilizer, reduced seeds, fewer agrochemicals, and greater climate resilience. In this article, we review what is becoming known about various farmer-centred innovations for agroecological crop management that can contribute to agricultural sustainability. These changes represent the emerging system of crop intensification, which is being increasingly applied in Asian, African, and Latin American countries. More research will be needed to verify the efficacy and impact of these innovations and to clarify their conditions and limits. But as no negative effects for human or environmental health have been identified, making these agronomic options more widely known should prompt more investigation and, to the extent justified by results, utilization of these methodologies.

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