138-6A View of Soil Management and Climate Change Challenges in Southern Africa.
See more from this Division: S06 Soil & Water Management & ConservationSee more from this Session: Symposium--Role of Soil Management In Addressing Climate Change: I
Farming in southern Africa varies from extensive livestock production on rangeland to intensive crop production under irrigation, practised by subsistence to commercial farmers on a diversity of natural agricultural resources. The strong seasonality of rainfall in combination with very high evapotranspiration makes stock and crop farming vulnerable to droughts that are common. Droughts are aggravated by inappropriate management practices that exhaust for example soils of nutrients and organic matter. The latter serves as either a source or sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide that is one of the greenhouse gases contributing to climate change. Impacts of different kinds of land use and coinciding management practices on soil organic matter contents will be addressed through several case studies from the region. Based on knowledge from these case studies the challenges facing soil management in mitigating the effects of expected climate change will be discussed.
See more from this Session: Symposium--Role of Soil Management In Addressing Climate Change: I