Using locally available fertilisers to enhance the yields of swidden farmers in Papua New Guinea
Using locally available fertilisers to enhance the yields of swidden farmers in Papua New Guinea
Context
Swidden agriculture (a type of small-scale agriculture) is crucial to the livelihood and food security of millions of people in tropical regions. Social-ecological changes, including population growth and anti-swidden policies, are putting pressure on the existing swidden system to increase agricultural productivity in a sustainable way. Enhancing soil fertility is a promising option for increasing crop yields and extending lifetimes of agricultural fields, thereby reducing the demand to clear new land. However, there is limited information on how swidden farmers can best maintain soil fertility.
Objective
Our aim was to investigate whether using locally available fertilisers can increase soil quality, crop yields and lifetimes of swidden fields.
Methods
We established experimental gardens on the land of swidden farmers in the Lowlands of Papua New Guinea, where the majority of the population depends on swidden agriculture. Gardens were set up on two types of sites; five were established on new sites that had just been prepared for gardening by cutting and burning vegetation after a fallow period, whereas another five were prepared on garden sites that were just being fallowed. We applied three treatments; i) compost consisting of decaying banana peels, ii) chicken manure, and iii) NPK fertiliser to different plots within each garden; and tracked soil quality and yields of sweet potato over 12 months (three post-intervention cropping periods). We also conducted in-depth interviews with local farmers to understand their perspective on soil management.
Results and conclusions
Few farmers typically used compost, chicken manure or NPK fertiliser. Many were keen to try these fertilisers, provided they had more information. The performance of treatments depended on the type of garden with chicken manure increasing tuber yields in fallowed gardens but not new gardens, and banana peel compost also increasing tuber yields in fallowed gardens although not significantly. NPK fertiliser was the best option because it was the only fertiliser that increased yields in both new and fallowed gardens, produced tubers of similar quality and taste to control plots and was financially profitable. Treatments affected yield through increasing available nitrogen and reducing soil moisture. We also found that farmers fallow their gardens despite adequate sweet potato yields, so whether using fertilisers can enhance the lifetime of fields will depend on additional factors such as labour input needed.
Significance
Our work shows how swidden agriculture can potentially be adapted so that it continues to be a sustainable way of farming and living.
Hazenbosch, Mirjam
07149d5b-2ecc-459b-ba88-ceab094c0013
Sui, Shen
449c3d52-1402-4b7b-a653-3a7434184a14
Isua, Brus
e0921958-5395-4484-aecb-302aa0d16040
Beauchamp, Emilie
6d51d351-782e-4a5f-8649-e75eb711e79a
Frouz, Jan
0183c1a7-ca83-448d-bd4e-7cfb9dfa2a8a
Imale, Kiole
eb0507e3-fcb5-4ad2-8bd7-2d7e1783086e
Jimbudo, Mavis
ed19f687-8844-4a85-a060-c85be3b16774
Milner Gulland, E.J.
df4e9454-0517-43ec-9c70-c2e78ee52077
Novotny, Vojtech
a66c95b7-decd-4097-95cf-854528563033
Vesela, Hana
3a6c5234-aa71-4ff3-ac2b-e4052985c634
Morris, Rebecca J
f63d9be3-e08f-4251-b6a0-43b312d3997e
1 August 2021
Hazenbosch, Mirjam
07149d5b-2ecc-459b-ba88-ceab094c0013
Sui, Shen
449c3d52-1402-4b7b-a653-3a7434184a14
Isua, Brus
e0921958-5395-4484-aecb-302aa0d16040
Beauchamp, Emilie
6d51d351-782e-4a5f-8649-e75eb711e79a
Frouz, Jan
0183c1a7-ca83-448d-bd4e-7cfb9dfa2a8a
Imale, Kiole
eb0507e3-fcb5-4ad2-8bd7-2d7e1783086e
Jimbudo, Mavis
ed19f687-8844-4a85-a060-c85be3b16774
Milner Gulland, E.J.
df4e9454-0517-43ec-9c70-c2e78ee52077
Novotny, Vojtech
a66c95b7-decd-4097-95cf-854528563033
Vesela, Hana
3a6c5234-aa71-4ff3-ac2b-e4052985c634
Morris, Rebecca J
f63d9be3-e08f-4251-b6a0-43b312d3997e
Hazenbosch, Mirjam, Sui, Shen, Isua, Brus, Beauchamp, Emilie, Frouz, Jan, Imale, Kiole, Jimbudo, Mavis, Milner Gulland, E.J., Novotny, Vojtech, Vesela, Hana and Morris, Rebecca J
(2021)
Using locally available fertilisers to enhance the yields of swidden farmers in Papua New Guinea.
Agricultural Systems, 192, [103089].
(doi:10.1016/j.agsy.2021.103089).
Abstract
Context
Swidden agriculture (a type of small-scale agriculture) is crucial to the livelihood and food security of millions of people in tropical regions. Social-ecological changes, including population growth and anti-swidden policies, are putting pressure on the existing swidden system to increase agricultural productivity in a sustainable way. Enhancing soil fertility is a promising option for increasing crop yields and extending lifetimes of agricultural fields, thereby reducing the demand to clear new land. However, there is limited information on how swidden farmers can best maintain soil fertility.
Objective
Our aim was to investigate whether using locally available fertilisers can increase soil quality, crop yields and lifetimes of swidden fields.
Methods
We established experimental gardens on the land of swidden farmers in the Lowlands of Papua New Guinea, where the majority of the population depends on swidden agriculture. Gardens were set up on two types of sites; five were established on new sites that had just been prepared for gardening by cutting and burning vegetation after a fallow period, whereas another five were prepared on garden sites that were just being fallowed. We applied three treatments; i) compost consisting of decaying banana peels, ii) chicken manure, and iii) NPK fertiliser to different plots within each garden; and tracked soil quality and yields of sweet potato over 12 months (three post-intervention cropping periods). We also conducted in-depth interviews with local farmers to understand their perspective on soil management.
Results and conclusions
Few farmers typically used compost, chicken manure or NPK fertiliser. Many were keen to try these fertilisers, provided they had more information. The performance of treatments depended on the type of garden with chicken manure increasing tuber yields in fallowed gardens but not new gardens, and banana peel compost also increasing tuber yields in fallowed gardens although not significantly. NPK fertiliser was the best option because it was the only fertiliser that increased yields in both new and fallowed gardens, produced tubers of similar quality and taste to control plots and was financially profitable. Treatments affected yield through increasing available nitrogen and reducing soil moisture. We also found that farmers fallow their gardens despite adequate sweet potato yields, so whether using fertilisers can enhance the lifetime of fields will depend on additional factors such as labour input needed.
Significance
Our work shows how swidden agriculture can potentially be adapted so that it continues to be a sustainable way of farming and living.
Text
Hazenbosch et al. Agricultural Systems 2021 Author accepted manuscript
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 February 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 June 2021
Published date: 1 August 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 447000
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/447000
ISSN: 0308-521X
PURE UUID: 3fe6b4c3-fb8a-4d86-a422-e33944bd2cf7
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 01 Mar 2021 17:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:20
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Contributors
Author:
Mirjam Hazenbosch
Author:
Shen Sui
Author:
Brus Isua
Author:
Emilie Beauchamp
Author:
Jan Frouz
Author:
Kiole Imale
Author:
Mavis Jimbudo
Author:
E.J. Milner Gulland
Author:
Vojtech Novotny
Author:
Hana Vesela
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