As part of its efforts to improve fertilizer use and efficiency in West Africa, and following the recent adoption of the West African fertilizer recommendation action plan (RAP) by ECOWAS, this volume focuses on IFDC’s technical lead with key partner institutions and experts to build on previous and current fertilizer recommendations for various crops and countries in West Africa for wider uptake by public policy makers and fertilizer industry actors.
Tabella dei contenuti
Preface.- 1. Soil Organic Carbon and Proper Fertilizer Recommendation.- 2. Nutrient Management in Livestock Systems in West Africa Sahel with Emphasis On Feed and Grazing Management.- 3. Managing Fertilizer Recommendations in Rice-based Cropping Systems Challenges and Strategic Approaches.- 4. Soil Organic Carbon and Nitrogen in Agroforestry Systems in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Review.- 5. Effect of Hill Placement of Nutrients on Millet Productivity and Characteristics of Sahelian Soils of Niger. Analysis of Yield Trend After Three Years of Cropping.- 6. Diagnostic of Mineral Deficiencies and Interactions in Upland Rice Cropping Across Different Agroecologies of West Africa.- 7. Assessment of Soil Fertility Status and Integrated Soil Fertility Management in Ghana.- 8. Response of Rice, Maize and Millet to Fertilizers in Mali.- 9. Role of Local Agro-Minerals in Mineral Recommendations For Crops: Examples of Some Natural Phosphates from West Africa.- 10. Fertilizer Recommendation for Maize and Rice Based on Participatory Subtractive Testing.- 11. State of Places of Fertilizer in Corn Crops, Mil / Sorgho, Niebe, Rice and Cotton in Mali.- 12. Fertilizer Recommendation for Maize, Sorghum, Millet, Cowpea, Soybean and Cotton in Nigeria.- 13. Improvement of the Agronomic Efficiency of Mineral Fertilization by Microdose Under Sorghum in the Subaridal Zone of Burkina Faso.- 14. Socio-economic Determinants and Trends on Fertilizer Use in West Africa.- 15. Economic Efficiency of Microdose Fertilization on Smallholder Farms in the Northern Sudanian Region of Burkina Faso.- 16. Improving Fertilizer Recommendations For Cocoa in Ghana Based On Inherent Soil Fertility Characteristics.- 17. A Review of Study on Fertilizer Response By the Oil Palm (Elaeis guineensis) Nigeria.- 18. An Assessment of Inherent Chemical Properties of Soils for Balanced Fertilizer Recommendations for Cocoa in Ghana.
Circa l’autore
Dr Bationo is from Burkina Faso, and holds a Ph D in Soil Chemistry from Laval University (Canada). He is currently the Senior Resource Mobilization Officer, Africa at AGRA. A post he took up after serving as the West Africa Director and Senior Program Officer for the Soil Health Program. Prior to his joining AGRA, Dr. Bationo was the Coordinator of the African Network for Soil Biology and Fertility (Af Net) and the Deputy Director of the Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility Institute (TSBF) in Nairobi, Kenya. Before that, he was a Principal Soil Scientist seconded to ICRISAT’s Sahelian Centre by the International Fertilizer Development Center (IFDC). In 2009, he received the annual award from the International Fertilizer Industry Association in Shanghai for his work in soil health. He has over 300 publications to his credit and received the Principal Staff Achievement Award for the year 2004 from the CIAT board and The Highest Civilian Award from the Government of Niger for contribution to the development of soil fertility restoration technologies in the Sahel. The Doctorate Honoris Causa award was also inferred on him from the University of Sweden.