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Fertilizer tree

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fertilizer treesare used inagroforestryto improve the condition ofsoilsused forfarming.Aswoodylegumes,theycapture nitrogenfrom the air and put it in the soil through their roots and falling leaves.[1]They can also bring nutrients from deep in the soil up to the surface for crops with roots that cannot reach that depth.[2]Fertilizer trees are further useful for preventing fertilizer erosion,soil degradationand relateddesertification,and improving water usage for crops.[1]

Sesbania,Gliricidia,Tephrosia,andFaidherbia albidaare known as fertilizer trees. Tree lucerne or tagasaste (Cytisus proliferus) is able to fix more than 587 kg. of nitrogen per hectare per year. It can increase maize (corn) yields from 1 ton per hectare per year to more than 10 tons per ha/year in areas with more than 850 mm. of rain per year or a perched water table. Tree lucerne is also used to create and maintainterra preta.

Use in Africa

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The use ofFaidherbia albidainMalawiandZambiahas resulted in a doubling or even tripling of maize yields.[3]As part of evergreen agriculture, use of fertilizer trees is proposed as a means to improve food security. Niger has more than 4.8 million hectares of predominantly Faidherbia agroforests, while Zambia has 300,000 hectares.[3]In Zambia and Malawi, farmers plant the trees in a checkerboard pattern every 30 feet.[4]

Fertilizer trees are used to prevent the expansion of desert, and to keep agriculture viable in arid lands in many African countries.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab Langford, Kate (October 14, 2011)."New Study Finds 400,000 Farmers in Southern Africa Using 'Fertilizer Trees' to Dramatically Improve Food Security".World Agroforestry Centre. Archived fromthe originalon March 9, 2014.RetrievedAugust 29,2012.
  2. ^"Zambian Fertilizer Trees Improve Soil, Maize Production".November 2009.
  3. ^ab"Evergreen Agriculture | World Agroforestry Centre".Archived fromthe originalon 2011-05-15.Retrieved2010-12-02.
  4. ^Marshall, Jessica (August 8, 2012)."African tree acts as 'fertilizer factory' for crops".NBC News.RetrievedAugust 29,2012.
  5. ^Langford, Kate (August 31, 2011)."Surviving drought through agroforestry".World Agroforestry Centre. Archived fromthe originalon October 16, 2012.RetrievedAugust 29,2012.