Citation Information

  • Title : Challenges and opportunities for conservation tillage-direct drilling in CWANA region: ICARDA/NARS's experience.
  • Source : Options Mediterraneennes. Serie A, Seminaires Mediterraneens
  • Publisher : Centre International de Hautes Etudes Agronomiques Mediterraneennes; Montpellier; France
  • Issue : 69
  • Pages : 161-165
  • Year : 2006
  • Document Type : Journal Article
  • Language : English
  • Authors:
    • Pala, M.
  • Climates:
  • Cropping Systems: Conservation cropping systems. Dryland cropping system. Legumes. No-till cropping systems. Till cropping systems. Wheat.
  • Countries:

Summary

The past several decades have witnessed a change from traditional to more intensive agriculture in dryland farming systems of West Asia and North Africa and also in the transitional period of Central Asia and Caucasus (CAC). These two areas can be combined and called the Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA) region, which covers diverse agroecological conditions from mild lowlands (Syria) to cold continental (CAC) and cold highlands (Turkey). This region is a major area of the world where drought invariably limits crop production in approximately 1.7 million ha arable land. Agriculture is primarily based on rainfed cropping during the relatively cooler late autumn to early spring as rainfall ranged generally between 200 to 600 mm per year. Dryland crops are mainly wheat, food legumes such as lentil, chickpea, faba beans, and forage legumes such as vetch, medics and lathyrus. Increasing human and livestock population has led desertification and soil degradation in the region. This has led also ICARDA to an assessment of tillage systems for efficiency, enhanced productivity and sustainability of the various farming system changes through a series of long-term trials in the mid 1980s at ICARDA headquarter as well as in the National Agricultural Research Services in close collaboration. Results at ICARDA and the region support a preference for the conservation tillage system (minimum tillage) over deep tillage systems on the grounds of both energy-use efficiency and increased net revenue as direct benefits to livelihood of the rural population. However, whenever available and tested and adopted by farmers with their participatory evaluation as in Central Asia, no-till direct drilling would increase soil organic matter from approximately 0.9% to 1.3% at 0-10 cm top soil and sustain the systems productivity in the long-run on the basis of the initial research results throughout the CWANA region.

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