The Kellogg Biological Station, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI 49060, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010 Nov 30;107(48):20840-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1007199107. Epub 2010 Nov 22.
The Asian green revolution trebled grain yields through agrochemical intensification of monocultures. Associated environmental costs have subsequently emerged. A rapidly changing world necessitates sustainability principles be developed to reinvent these technologies and test them at scale. The need is particularly urgent in Africa, where ecosystems are degrading and crop yields have stagnated. An unprecedented opportunity to reverse this trend is unfolding in Malawi, where a 90% subsidy has ensured access to fertilization and improved maize seed, with substantive gains in productivity for millions of farmers. To test if economic and ecological sustainability could be improved, we preformed manipulative experimentation with crop diversity in a countrywide trial (n = 991) and at adaptive, local scales through a decade of participatory research (n = 146). Spatial and temporal treatments compared monoculture maize with legume-diversified maize that included annual and semiperennial (SP) growth habits in temporal and spatial combinations, including rotation, SP rotation, intercrop, and SP intercrop systems. Modest fertilizer intensification doubled grain yield compared with monoculture maize. Biodiversity improved ecosystem function further: SP rotation systems at half-fertilizer rates produced equivalent quantities of grain, on a more stable basis (yield variability reduced from 22% to 13%) compared with monoculture. Across sites, profitability and farmer preference matched: SP rotations provided twofold superior returns, whereas diversification of maize with annual legumes provided more modest returns. In this study, we provide evidence that in Africa, crop diversification can be effective at a countrywide scale, and that shrubby, grain legumes can enhance environmental and food security.
亚洲绿色革命通过单一作物的农用化学品集约化使粮食产量增加了两倍。随之而来的是环境成本的出现。不断变化的世界需要制定可持续性原则,对这些技术进行重新设计,并在大规模范围内进行测试。在非洲,生态系统退化和作物产量停滞不前,因此尤其需要这种技术。在马拉维,一个前所未有的机会正在出现,该国 90%的补贴确保了农民能够获得施肥和改良玉米种子的机会,使数百万农民的生产力得到了实质性提高。为了检验经济和生态可持续性是否可以提高,我们在全国范围内进行的一项试验(n = 991)和通过十年参与式研究在适应性的地方规模(n = 146)中进行了作物多样性的操纵性实验。时空处理方法将单一作物玉米与包括一年生和半多年生(SP)生长习性的豆科植物多样化玉米进行了比较,包括轮作、SP 轮作、间作和 SP 间作系统。适度的肥料集约化使粮食产量比单一作物玉米增加了一倍。生物多样性进一步改善了生态系统功能:在半肥水平下,SP 轮作系统的产量与单一作物玉米相当,但产量更稳定(产量变异性从 22%降低到 13%)。在各个地点,盈利能力和农民偏好相匹配:SP 轮作提供了两倍的回报,而与一年生豆科植物多样化玉米提供的回报则更为适度。在这项研究中,我们提供的证据表明,在非洲,作物多样化可以在全国范围内有效实施,并且多叶的粮食豆科植物可以增强环境和粮食安全。