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Do soil and water conservation practices influence crop productivity and household welfare? Evidence from rural Nigeria
2023
Ogunniyi, A.I. | Omotayo, A.O. | Olagunju, K.O. | Motunrayo, O. | Awotide, B.A. | Mavrotas, G. | Aremu, A.O.
One of the most serious challenges threatening agricultural sustainability in Nigeria is land degradation. Although this issue has received little attention, soil and water conservation practices have been identified as a possible pathway out of the potential problems posed by land degradation. Therefore, the central research question that this paper tries to address is the following: Do adoption of soil and water conservation (SWC) practices affect crop productivity and household welfare? This paper uses data collected by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) from maize farmers in rural Nigeria. We usedemploy the propensity score matching (PSM), inverse probability weighting adjusted regression model (IPWRA) approach, and the linear regression with endogenous treatment effect (LRETE) model to incorporate the typologies of SWC practices, and tested how the model affects crop productivity and household welfare. Additionally, multinomial logit was used to estimate the factors influencing the decision to adopt single and multiple SWC practices. The estimates show that education, age of the household head, access to credit, experience of drought, soil fertility, and occupational stress contribute to the decision to adopt SWC practices. The casual effect estimates reveal that both single and multiple adoptions of SWC practices had a positive and significant relationship with the crop productivity and welfare of the adopters. The results show that the adoption of combined SWC practices has a higher impact on crop productivity and welfare than single SWC practices. For instance, the adoption of a combination of three SWC practices was found to increase crop productivity and household welfare by 27.55% and 38.23%, respectively versus 13.91% and 15.11% in the case of single SWC practices. The study suggests that profile-raising agenda and efforts that focus on promoting the adoption of combination of SWC practices should be designed and implemented to enhance crop productivity and hence the welfare of the maize farming households in rural Nigeria.
Show more [+] Less [-]Do soil and water conservation practices influence crop productivity and household welfare? Evidence from rural Nigeria
2023
Ogunniyi, Adebayo Isaiah; Omotayo, Abiodun Olusola; Olagunju, Kehinde Oluseyi; Motunrayo, Olyeyemi; Awotide, Bola Amoke; Mavrotas, George; Oladapo, Adeyemi
PR | IFPRI3; ISI; CRP3.2; 4 Transforming Agricultural and Rural Economies | Development Strategies and Governance (DSG); Transformation Strategies | CGIAR Research Program on Maize (MAIZE)
Show more [+] Less [-]Assessment of parameter uncertainty for non-point source pollution mechanism modeling: A Bayesian-based approach
2020
Xueman, Yan | Wenxi, Lu | Yongkai, An | Weihong, Dong
Uncertainty assessment of parameters associated with non-point source pollution mechanism modeling are crucial for improving the effectiveness of pollution controlling. In this study, an approach based on Bayesian inference and integrated Markov chain Monte Carlo and multilevel factorial analysis has been developed, and it can not only apply straightforward Bayesian inference to assess parameter uncertainties, but also quantitatively investigate the main and interactive effects of multiple parameters on the model response variables by measuring the specific variations of model outputs. Its applicability and advantages are presented through the application of the Soil and Water Assessment Tool to Shitoukoumen Reservoir Catchment in northeast China. This study investigated the uncertainties of a set of sensitive parameters and their multilevel effects on model response variables, including average annual runoff (AAR), average annual sediment (AAS) and average annual total nitrogen (AAN). Results revealed that (i) soil conservation service runoff curve number for moisture condition II (CN2) had a positive effect on all response variables; (ii) available water capacity of the soil layer (SOL_AWC) had a negative effect on all response variables; (iii) the universal soil loss equation support practice (USLE_P) had a positive effect on AAS and AAN, and little effect on AAR; while the nitrate percolation coefficient (NPERCO) had a positive effect on AAN, and little effect on AAS and AAR; and (iv) the interactions amongst parameters had obvious interdependent effects on the model response variables, for example, the interaction between CN2 and SOL_AWC had a major impact on AAR. The above findings can improve the simulating and predicting capabilities of non-point source pollution mechanism model. Overall, this study highlights that the proposed approach represents a promising solution for uncertainty assessment of model parameters in non-point source pollution mechanism modeling.
Show more [+] Less [-]Influence of polyacrylamide application to soil on movement of microorganisms in runoff water
2000
Sojka, R.E. | Entry, J.A.
Polyacrylamide (PAM) use in irrigation for erosion control has increased water infiltration and reduced soil erosion. This has improved runoff water quality via lower concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorous, and pesticides, and decreased biological oxygen demand. Since non-toxic high molecular weight anionic PAMs removed clay size sediment particles in flowing water, it was hypothesized that PAM would effectively remove or immobilize microorganisms in flowing water. In an agricultural field at the USDA Agricultural Research Service, Idaho, USA, the efficacy of PAM-treatment of furrow irrigation water to remove several categories of microorganisms in the inflow and runoff was determined. Treatments were: (1) PAM application and a control; (2) three flow rates; (3) two distances from the inflow point; and (4) three times during each irrigation. After water travelled 1 m at 7.5 and 15.5/min, PAM-treatment reduced total bacterial and microbial biomass and total fungal biomass relative to the control treatment. After water travelled 40 m at 7.5, 15.5, and 22.5/min, PAM-treatment reduced algae, the numbers active and total bacteria, active and total fungal length, and total bacterial biomass, total fungal and microbial biomass relative to the control treatment. Although specific organisms were not identified or monitored in this study, the results clearly have implications for controlling the spread of soil-borne plant pathogens and other classes of harmful organisms within and among fields via irrigation water and in re-utilized return flows. Beyond furrow-irrigated agriculture, new methods to manage overland transmission of harmful microorganisms could potentially help control transport of pathogens from animal waste in runoff and groundwater.
Show more [+] Less [-]Sustainable improvement of soil health utilizing biochar and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: A review
2021
Conservation of soil health and crop productivity is the central theme for sustainable agriculture practices. It is unrealistic to expect that the burgeoning crop production demands will be met by a soil ecosystem that is increasingly unhealthy and constrained. Therefore, the present review is focused on soil amendment techniques, using biochar in combination with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), which is an indispensable biotic component that maintains plant-soil continuum. Globally significant progress has been made in elucidating the physical and chemical properties of biochar; along with its role in carbon sequestration. Similarly, research advances on AMF include its evolutionary background, functions, and vital roles in the soil ecosystem. The present review deliberates on the premise that biochar and AMF have the potential to become cardinal to management of agro-ecosystems. The wider perspectives of various agronomical and environmental backgrounds are discussed. The present state of knowledge, different aspects and limitations of combined biochar and AMF applications (BC + AMF), mechanisms of interaction between biochar and AMF, effects on plant growth, challenges and future opportunities of BC + AMF applications are critically reviewed. Given the severely constrained nature of soil health, the roles of BC + AMF in agriculture, bioremediation and ecology have also been examined. In spite of the potential benefits, the functionality and dynamics of BC + AMF in soil are far from being fully elucidated.
Show more [+] Less [-]Reclamation and vegetative restoration of problem soils and disturbed lands
1986
Brown, Darrell
137Cs and 239+240Pu in the Bohai Sea of China: Comparison in distribution and source identification between the inner bay and the tidal flat
2019
Zhuang, Qifan | Li, Guosheng | Wang, Fu | Tian, Lizhu | Jiang, Xingyu | Zhang, Kexing | Liu, Geng | Pan, Shaoming | Liu, Zhiyong
We investigated artificial radionuclides (²³⁹⁺²⁴⁰Pu and ¹³⁷Cs) in surface sediments and sediment cores collected from the Bohai Bay and the tidal flat of the Liaodong Bay, China. Increasing trends for ²³⁹⁺²⁴⁰Pu activities and ²⁴⁰Pu/²³⁹Pu atom ratios (˃0.18) were observed from land to sea and from north to south in the Bohai Bay. This spatial pattern implied that the scavenging process between riverine sediments and Pacific Proving Ground (PPG) source Pu transported by the currents such as Yellow Sea Warm Current had occurred in the Bohai Bay. In contrast, relatively lower ²⁴⁰Pu/²³⁹Pu atom ratios in the tidal flat of Liaodong Bay were due to the mixing process between more global out and less PPG source Pu. The riverine Pu contributions to the total global fallout Pu in the Haihe River (32.8%) were much lower than those in the Yangtze River estuary (77%–80%), indicating better soil conservation in the Haihe River Catchment.
Show more [+] Less [-]Nonpoint source pollution
1986
Gianessi, Leonard P.
[Effects of soil conservation on trees of the city of Hamburg damaged by deicing salt]
1988
Pfeiffer, E. (Hamburg Univ. (Germany, F.R.). Ordinariat fuer Bodenkunde)
Constraint relationship of ecosystem services in the Yangtze River Economic Belt, China
2022
Understanding the relationship among ecosystem services (ESs) is essential to promote ESs management and sustainable development. The relationship between ESs is mutual and can be expressed in terms of trade-offs, synergy, and constraints. The paper selected the InVEST model to assess the water yield (WY), soil conservation (SC), food production (FP), net primary productivity (NPP), and habitat quality (HQ) of the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) and used the constraint line method to analyze the relationship of paired ecological services at three scales: landscape, watershed, and land category. The following conclusions were drawn: (1) during the study period, the spatial changes of the five ecological services in the YREB did not change much, but the spatial distribution of the ecological services was different. (2) From 2000 to 2015, the constraint line of YREB paired ecological services had a high degree of fit. Under the three levels of landscape, watershed, and land category, the YREB has a variety of constraint types, including negative lines, logarithms, paraboloids, humped shapes, and rectangles. (3) At the three levels, the constraint lines between FP, NPP, WY, and SC and HQ were stable rectangular constraints; WY-SC was hump shaped, FP-NPP, FP-SC, FP-WY, NPP-WY, and NPP-SC changed with the scale, showing different spatial scale changes. (4) The paired ESs directly determined the ecological constraint curve but under the combined effect of other factors, which would affect or change the constraint line. We discussed the effects of weather, topography, and economy on the constraint relationship, and found that all have different degrees of influence.
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