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or millions of resource-poor dryland farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA), small total rainfall and its erratic, unreliable distribution constrain the achievement of stable, sustainable production systems which would provide them with satisfactory, low-risk livelihoods. High population growth rates in arid and semi-arid regions increase the demand for food, feed, and other agricultural products. At the same time, production increases from fertile lands are known to be declining, forcing people to use also marginal lands. Thus, both marginal and fertile lands are currently suffering from various forms of degradation, including nutrient depletion, soil acidification, soil erosion, and reduced soil water retention. Effective soil, water, and nutrient management requires actions not only at the farm level, but also at community, regional, and national levels. The agricultural priority across all dry-area farming systems in sub-Saharan Africa and CWANA is to increase biological and economic yield per unit of water.
OSWU Consortium One of ICARDA's activities directed at improving the productivity of water use in dry areas taps into knowledge and expertise from countries as far apart as Iran and South Africa, despite distinct differences, among other things, in rainfall distribution. ICARDA is, together with the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and the national research organization of South Africa (ARC-SCW), co-convener of the Optimizing Soil Water-use (OSWU) Consortium. This is a constituent of the CGIAR System-wide Soil, Water, and Nutrient Management Program (SWNMP). The overall goal of the consortium is sustainable and profitable agricultural production in dry areas, based upon the optimal use of the available water. It brings together two international agricultural research centers (IARC) and 12 national agricultural research and extension systems (NARES) in Burkina Faso, Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Kenya, Mali, Morocco, Niger, South Africa, Syria, Turkey, and Zimbabwe. By bringing together researchers and farmers from different environments, the OSWU Consortium promotes fruitful exchange of ideas, experience and, most important, practical techniques to combat the effects of water scarcity, and to sustainably improve production, security, and livelihood of the farmers in dry areas of WANA and SSA. An important achievement is a compendium of the state-of-the-art of research in the 12 member countries. Future outputs include generic tools that can be used by the other consortia and relevant eco-regional programs as well. It is OSWU's strategy to build on existing scientific knowledge and indigenous practices of soil and water conservation. Exchange of scientific and indigenous knowledge and technologies between countries and regions is a key element in the Consortium's approach. Therefore, linkages among and partnerships with NARES, international agricultural research centers, advanced research organizations, non-governmental organizations, and local farming communities play key roles in OSWU's strategy. These linkages increase and facilitate the spread of knowledge about the very specific techniques required to boost agricultural production in the varying ecosystems found in dry areas. In rainfed fields, improvement is possible only by conserving rainfall water in the root zone of crops (including shrubs and trees), and by managing the field and the crops to use this water more efficiently. However, actual water-use efficiency in current farming systems in the drought-prone countries of CWANA and SSA is often very low, and a surprisingly small proportion of the available water is actually transpired by the crop. The water losses at the field-level include surface runoff, percolation below the rooting zone, evaporation from the soil surface, seepage in deep cracks, and transpiration by weeds, but vary according to site- and situation-specific conditions and are often not well quantified. Viable farm-level techniques, such as those developed by ICARDA and ICRISAT for their mandate areas, are applicable in many other dry countries to reduce these losses and to increase the capture and retention of incoming water as well as maximize the proportion of water that is productively transpired by the crop. The development of water-efficient cultivars is one way to achieve this. Such new varieties, which are often developed by national programs from ICARDA-sourced germplasm, usually require improved soil, crop and cropping system management.
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