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Nairobi, 24 August 2009

2 nd World Congress of Agroforestry. Nairobi, 24 August 2009. Agroforestry for an Ever-green Revolution. Prof M.S. Swaminathan, FRS UNESCO Chair in Ecotechnology M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, Chennai, India. Green Revolution Symphony (1968). Major Components. Technology Services

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Nairobi, 24 August 2009

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  1. 2nd World Congress of Agroforestry Nairobi, 24 August 2009 Agroforestry for an Ever-green Revolution Prof M.S. Swaminathan, FRS UNESCO Chair in Ecotechnology M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, Chennai, India

  2. Green Revolution Symphony (1968) Major Components • Technology • Services • Public Policies • Farmers’ enthusiasm Indian farmers achieved as much progress in wheat production in four years (1964–68), as during the preceding 4000 years. Assured and remunerative market is the prime mover of farmers’ enthusiasm

  3. Sustainable Food Production : Early Warning “Intensive cultivation of land without conservation of soil fertility and soil structure would lead ultimately to the springing up of deserts. Irrigation without arrangements for drainage would result in soils getting alkaline or saline. Indiscriminate use of pesticides, fungicides and herbicides could cause adverse changes in biological balance as well as lead to an increase in the incidence of cancer and other diseases, through the toxic residues present in the grains or other edible parts. Unscientific tapping of underground water would lead to the rapid exhaustion of this wonderful capital resource left to us through ages of natural farming. The rapid replacement of numerous locally adapted varieties with one or two high yielding strains in large contiguous areas would result in the spread of serious diseases capable of wiping out entire crops, as happened prior to the Irish potato famine of 1845 and the Bengal rice famine of 1942. Therefore, the initiation of exploitative agriculture without a proper understanding of the various consequences of every one of the changes introduced into traditional agriculture and without first building up a proper scientific and training base to sustain it, may only lead us into an era of agricultural disaster in the long run, rather than to an era of agricultural prosperity.” M.S. Swaminathan Indian Science Congress, Varanasi, January 4, 1968

  4. Need for an Ever-green Revolution About 80% of food production comes from farmers with small holdings. For them, Agriculture is the backbone of the livelihood security system Hence, higher productivity per units of arable land and irrigation water is essential to enhance marketable surplus and thereby of cash income. This should however be achieved without harm to the ecological foundations essential for sustainable agriculture. The green revolution should become an ever-green revolution leading to an enhancement in productivity in perpetuity without ecological harm Swaminathan, 1982

  5. From Green to an Ever-green Revolution Theme for the 50th Anniversary Meeting of the Crop Science Society of America

  6. From Green to an Ever-green Revolution Pathways If farm ecology and economics go wrong, nothing else will go right

  7. Climate Change: L’Aquilla G 8 Summit (July 2009) Implications of Agreement to permit rise in Mean Temperature by 2 deg C • Risks rise rapidly with temperature. Once temperature increase rises about 2 deg C, upto 4 billion people could be experiencing growing water shortages. Agriculture could cease to be viable in parts of the world, particularly in the tropics, and millions more people will be at risk of hunger. Above 2 deg C, the risk of a disintegration of the West Antarctic ice sheet rises significantly, as does the greater danger of ‘tipping points’ for soil carbon release and the collapse of the amazon rainforest.

  8. Impact of higher temperature on Agriculture • Water scarcity and frequency of drought will increase • Rise in temperature could increase the risk of heat or drought stress to crops and livestock • Length of the growing period (LGP) is likely to change • Physiological development is accelerated which hastens maturation and reduces yields • Increased night-time respiration reduces potential yield

  9. Some Recent Reports on unleashing Africa’s agricultural potential

  10. Africa’s Ever-green Revolution • Unlike Asia, Africa does not have a dominant farming system on which food security largely depends • Out of the 17 distinct farming systems identified in different parts of Africa, the following four systems offer immediate promise • Agro-forestry system involving cocoa, coffee, oil palm, rubber, yams, maize and fertilizer trees • Maize-based system involving maize, cotton, cattle, goats and poultry • Cereal-root crop mixed farming system based primarily on maize, sorghum, millet, cassava, yams, legumes and cattle. • Irrigated farming system based primarily on rice, cotton, vegetables, cattle and poultry All these systems provide opportunities for additional non-farm employment

  11. Learning from Successes : S & T Bright Spots • Soil fertility replenishment through nitrogen fixing shrubs, trees and rock phosphate application • Biological control of cassava mealy bug • Banana tissue culture • New Rices for Africa (NERICA) • Agroforestry systems based on Faidherbia albida

  12. Overcoming Soil Hunger An approach that makes it possible for farmers to produce most of the nitrogen that crops need is through fertilizer trees in the field – manufacturing nitrogen and cycling P and K with no cash investment.

  13. Photo-insensitive Mutant of Sesbania rostrata Fixes nitrogen both in stem and roots

  14. Conservation Agriculture with Faidherbia albida – Pathway to Sustainable Maize Production in Central and Southern Africa Faidherbia is indigenous in many African countries 60 years of research shows on each hectare, mature trees supply the equivalent of 300kg of complete fertilizer and 250kg of lime. This can sustain a maize yield of 4 tons/ha

  15. Comparison of maize and other crops grown under and outside the canopy of Faidherbia in Zambia. Note the dramatic difference in maize growth, February 2009

  16. Mango - Wheat

  17. Impact of Fertilizer Tree based Agroforestry System Source: Malawi, WAgFor

  18. Gene Banks for a Warming Planet Community Gene & Seed Banks National Gene Bank Svalbard (North Pole) Global Seed Vault Conservation continuum

  19. Enhancing the Coping Capacity of Local Communities Conservation - Cultivation – Consumption - Commerce Water Bank Gene Bank Seed Bank Grain Bank Local level Food and Water Security

  20. 19 varieties of Yam in 4 species were in Cultivation (as of 2006) but less than 5 in rural market and none in urban market • Dioscorea alata • Inchikachil I & II` • Kuzhikavithu I • Kuzhikavithu II • Quintalkachil I • Quintalkachil II • Anakomban • Kaduvakkayyan • Urulan kachil • Kuppathottikizhangu • Elivalankachil • Neendi/Veetukizhangu • Vella kachil I & II • Chorakachil/cherakachil/chuvappukachil/ Neela kachil I, II & III • Dioscorea esculenta • 14. Nanakizhangu • 15. Vella Enchi kachil • 16. Mullan Kachil • Dioscorea rotundata • 17.Africankachil • 18. Thoonankachi • Dioscorea bulbifera • 19. Erachikachil/Adathappu Life Saving Crops

  21. Converting Biodiversity Hot Spots into Happy Spots : Role of Agroforestry based Biovalley The goal of the Biovalley is to promote biohappiness through integrated attention to the conservation, sustainable use and equitable sharing of the bioresources of the area leading to health, work and income security. Conservation Farming will include steps for soil health enhancement, harvesting and efficient use of rain water and saving and using plants for saving lives and strengthening livelihoods. A good example : Rift Valley Biovalley is to Biotechnology (BT), what Silicon Valley is to Information Technology (IT)

  22. Agroforestry based Sea Water Farming Sea Water : 97% of Global Water Pool Agriculture : Consumes over 80% of fresh water • Components of Action Plan • Mixed cropping of Mangroves, Salicornia and Atriplex • Sustainable capture fisheries • Low external input sustainable aquaculture (shrimp farming) • Market driven off-farm enterprises to improve the population supporting capacity of the ecosystem.

  23. Integrated Sea Water Farming (Agro-Aqua Farms) • Cultivation of halophytes (Mangroves, Salicornia, Atriplex, etc) • Meeting the wood needs of the local community through bamboo, casuarina, etc. • Culture of prawns, shrimps, crabs etc, in the canals between tree species using low external input sustainable aquaculture (LEISA) techniques Contd…

  24. Integrated Sea Water Farming (Agro-Aqua Farms) • Rehabilitation of degraded mangrove and other coastal ecosystems through Coastal Rehabilitation Self-help Groups • Establishment of artificial coral reefs where appropriate • Fostering the growth of coastal biovillages for the generation of new livelihood opportunities based on the sustainable use of natural resources and application of appropriate technologies Contd…

  25. Mangroves : Useful Sources of Genes for Salinity Tolerance

  26. 8.3 tC/ha from atmosphere 12.7 t/ha biomass (dry) (5.0 tC/ha) 11.0 t/ha biomass (dry) (3.3 tC/ha) Mangrove Carbon Fixation at One Year The Seawater Forests Initiative

  27. Field trial of a transgenic rice strain with Superoxide dismutase gene from Avicennia marina The loss of every species and gene limits our options for the future

  28.  Gene Deployment for Drought Tolerance Prosopis juliflora has wide adaptation to water stress and drought conditions Used as source material for drought tolerant genes Control 36 days of water withdrawal

  29. Sea Water Farming Outer bund View of the Integrated Seawater farm near Chidambaram Inner bund Mangrove plantation Grow out area For fish, crab TIDAL OUTLET

  30. Agroforestry as a Strategy to Climate Change Adaptation • Adaptation capabilities of agroforestry • Drought :Tree components through their deep roots explore a large soil volume of water and nutrients which help to maintain production during drought seasons • High rainfall :Pumping excess water out of the soil profile more rapidly by higher evapo-transpiration and maintain aerated soil conditions • Temperature :Increased soil cover and multi strata cropping pattern system utilize the light resource efficiently and guard the soil from direct sunlight which lead to a reduction in soil temperature

  31. Carbon sequestration Option for Climate Change Mitigation • Agroforestry system recognized as a carbon sequestration strategy because of its applicability in agricultural lands as well as in reforestation programs • Agroforestry offers the highest potential for carbon sequestration • Direct role: Carbon sequestration rates ranging from1.5 to 3.5 Mg C ha−1 yr−1 in agroforestry systems • Indirect role: Agroforestry has also some indirect effects on C sequestration since it helps to reduce pressure on natural forests

  32. Carbon sequestration potential of four land use systems (Adapted from IPCC, 2000) Agroforestry has such a high potential, not because it is the land use practice with the highest carbon density, but because there is such a large area that is susceptible for the land use change

  33. Transforming Lives and Landscapes Global Research Projects • Domestication, utilization and conservation of superior agroforestry germplasm • Maximising on-farm productivity of trees and agroforestry systems • Improving tree product marketing for smallholders • Reducing risks to land health and targeting agroforestry interventions to enhance land productivity and food availability • Improving the ability of farmers, ecosystems and governments to cope with climate change • Developing policies and incentives for multi-functional landscapes with trees that provide environmental services World Agroforestry Centre, 2008.

  34. Ever-green Revolution “The problem before us is how to feed billions of new mouths over the next several decades and save the rest of life at the same time, without being trapped in a Faustian bargain that threatens freedom from security. The benefits must come from an evergreen revolution. The aim of this new thrust is to lift food production well above the level attained by the green revolution of the 1960s, using technology and regulatory policy more advanced and even safer than now in existence” - Edward O. Wilson, 2002 The Future of life

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