Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T10:39:01.416Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ecological Constraints on Agricultural Development in Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Get access

Extract

It has been commonly supposed that there are major factors inherent in tropical environments which make them uniquely problematic, and essentially inhospitable-to agricultural development. They, and especially their soils, are seen as intractable and fragile, and liable to break down irreversibly if man dares to meddle with the delicate, but vaguely conceived and tenuously defined, “ecological balance” (see Gourou, 1953; Stamp, 1953 a,b; Richards, 1952; 1970; Janzen, 1975; inter alia). The unarticulated corollory is that more temperate environments are,to a great extent robust and unproblematic. Both premises may be seriously questioned, and their conjunction is dubious in the extreme. In the first place, though it may be demonstrated with some plausibility that tropical environments have presented obstacles to productive agricultural development, it remains to be shown that these problems are solely the consequence of environmental characteristics, or whether perhaps the major factor is the lack of appropriate ingenuity, with technological inventiveness inhibited by the temperate blinkers of those responsible for technological research.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Acock, B., Thornley, J. H. M., and Warren Wilson, J., 1971 Photosynthesis and energy conversion. Potential Crop Production (ed. Wareing, P. F. and Cooper, J. P.). (Heinemann; London).Google Scholar
Ameyan, J. o., 1980 Land evaluation in a part of Northern Nigeria. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, University of Birmingham.Google Scholar
Baeyens, J., 1949 The bases of classification of tropical soils in relation to their agricultural value. Commonwealth Dur. Soil Sci. Techn. Comm. 46, pp.99102.Google Scholar
Baldwin, Heather, and Court, Patience, 1970 Edge effects in the microclimate of cultivation patches in tropical forests; a theoretical examination. Unpublished Seminar Paper, University of Birmingham.Google Scholar
Barber, S. A., 1962 A diffusion and mass-flow concept of soil nutrient availability. Soil Sci. 93, pp.3949.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bawden, M. G., and Stobbs, A. R., 1963 The land resources of eastern Bechuanaland. Directorate of Overseas Surveys, Ministry of Overseas Development, London.Google Scholar
Christian, C. S., 1959 The eco-complex in its importance for agricultural assessment. Biogeography and Ecology in Australia; Monographiae Biologicae 8. ch.36, pp.587605.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Combe, J. and Gewald, N., 1979 Guia de Campo de los Ensayos Forestales del CATIE en Turrialba, Costa Rica. Centro Agronomica Tropical de Investigacion y Enseñanza, Turrialba, Cost Rica.Google Scholar
Coupland, R. T., 1958 The-Great Plains grasslands. Bot. Rev. 24, pp.273317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drury, W. H., and Nisbet, I. C. T., 1971 Clement's model of succession in plant communities. General Systems 16, pp.5768.Google Scholar
Dupriez, H., 1980. Cultures, associées ou monocultures? Validité du savoir paysan. Environment Africain: Études et Recherches 50. (ENDA, Dakar et IAI, Londres).Google Scholar
Duvigneaud, P., 1946. La variabilité des associations végètales. Bull. Soc. Royale Botanique Belgique 78, pp. 107134.Google Scholar
Farr, E., Vaidyanathan, L. V., and Nye, P. H., 1969 Measurement of the ionic concentration gradients in soil near roots. Soil Sci. 107, pp. 385391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gourou, P., 1953 (lst Edition) The Tropical World. (Longman; London).Google Scholar
Hallsworth, E. C., and Crawford, D. V., 1965. (Editors) Experimental Pedology. (Butterworth; London).Google Scholar
Janzen, D. H., 1975 The Ecology of Plants In the Tropics. (Arnold; London).Google Scholar
Kowal, J. M., and Kassam, A. H., 1978 Agricultural Ecology of Savanna. (O.U.P.; Oxford).Google Scholar
Kuchler, A. W., 1972 Vegetation of the Great Plains. Erdkunde 26, pp.120129.Google Scholar
Laudelout, H., 196 Dynamics of tropical soils in relation to their following techniques. (mimeographed).Google Scholar
Longman, K. A., and Jenik, J., 1974 Tropical Forest and its Environment. (Longman; London).Google Scholar
Miles, J., 1979 Vegetation Dynamics. (Chapman and Hall; London).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, W. B., Moss, R. P., and Ojo, G. J. A., 1980 (Editors) Rural Energy Systems in the Humid Tropics. (United Nations University; Tokyo).Google Scholar
Morison, C. G. T., Hoyle, A. C., and Hope-Simpson, J. F., 1948 Tropical soil-vegetation catenas and mosaics. A study of the south-western part of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. J. Ecol. 36, pp.184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moss, R. P., 1968 Land use, vegetation and soil factors in south-west Nigeria: a new approach. Pacific Viewpoint, 9, pp.107127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moss, R. P., 1969 The appraisal of land resources in tropical Africa: a critique of some concepts. Pacific Viewpoint, 10, pp.1827.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moss, R. P., 1978 Concept and theory in land evaluation for rural land-use planning. Occasional Paper, 5, Dept. of Geography, University of Birmingham.Google Scholar
Moss, R. P., 1980 Ecological constraints on fuelwood production in the humid and subhumid tropics. UNU/CHRS Collogue: l'energie dans les communautés rurales des pays du Tiers-Monde. CEGET, Bordeaux.Google Scholar
Murdoch, G., et alia, 1976 Soils of the Western State savanna in Nigeria. Land Resource Study 23. Land Resources Division, Ministry of Overseas Development; London.Google Scholar
Newbould, P., 1969 The absorption of nutrients by plants from different zones in the soil. Ecological Aspects of the Mineral Nutrition of Plants, (Blackwell; Oxford).Google Scholar
Ohrlogge, A. J., 1962 Some soil-root-plant relationships. Soil Sci. 93, pp.3038.Google Scholar
Pereira, H. C., 1962 (Editor) Hydrological effects of changes in land use in some East African catchment areas. East African Agric. and Forestry J. 27 (Special Issue).Google Scholar
Richards, P. W., 1952 The Tropical Rain Forest. (C.U.P.; Cambridge).Google Scholar
Richards, P. W., 1970 The Life of the Jungle. (McGraw Hill; New York).Google Scholar
Russell, R. S., and Sanderson, J., 1967 Nutrient uptake by different parts of the intact roots of plants. J. Exp. Bot. 18, pp.491508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slatyer, R. O., 1977 (Editor) Dynamic Changes in Terrestrial Ecosystems: Patterns of Change, Techniques for Study end Applications to Management. (UNESCO; Paris).Google Scholar
Stamp, L. D., 1953a Africa: a Study in Tropical Development. (Wiley; New York).Google Scholar
Stamp, L. D., 1953b Our Undeveloped World. (Faber; London).Google Scholar
Vine, H., 1968 Developments in the study of soils and shifting agriculture in tropical Africa. The Soil Resources of Tropical Africa (ed. Moss, R. P.). (C.U.P.; Cambridge).Google Scholar
de Wit, C. T., Brouwer, R., and Penning de Vries, F. W. T., 1971 A dynamic model of plant and crop growth. Potential Crop Production (Ed. Wareing, P. F. and Cooper, J. P.). (Heinemann; London).Google Scholar
Wright, H. E., and Heinselman, M. L., 1973 (Editors) Fire in the North American conifer forest. Quaternary Res. 3, pp.317513.Google Scholar
Young, A., 1973 Rural land evaluation. Evaluating the Human Environment (Ed. Dawson, J. A. and Doornkamp, J. C.). (Arnold; London).Google Scholar