Agri Kultuur October / Oktober 2014 | Page 17

CA is characterized by three linked principles, namely:  Continuous minimum mechanical soil disturbance.  Permanent organic soil cover.  Diversification of crop species grown in sequences and/or associations. CA principles are universally applicable to all agricultural landscapes and land uses with locally adapted practices. CA enhances biodiversity and natural biological processes above and below the ground surface. Soil interventions such as mechanical soil disturbance are reduced to an absolute minimum or avoided, and external inputs such as agrochemicals and plant nutrients of mineral or organic origin are applied optimally and in Ample evidence now exists of the successes of CA under many diverse agro-ecological conditions to justify a major investment of human and financial resources in catalysing a shift, whenever and wherever conditions permit it, towards CA. This will lead to large and demonstrable savings in machinery and energy use and in carbon emissions, a rise in soil organic matter content and biotic activity. It will also reduce carbon emissions, ensure less erosion, increase crop water availability and thus resilience to drought, improve recharge of aquifers and reduce the impact of the apparent increased volatility in weather associated with climate change. It will cut production costs, lead to more reliable harvests and reduce risks especially for smallholders. The latter point has been the basis of the Low External CA facilitates good agronomy, such as timely operations, and improves overall land husbandry for rain-fed and irrigated production. Complemented by other known good practices, including the use of quality seeds, and integrated pest, nutrient, weed and water management, etc., CA is a base for sustainable agricultural production intensification. It opens increased options for integration of production sectors, such as crop-livestock integration and the integration of trees and pastures into agricultural landscapes. Photo: Hendrik Smith No-till hand- and animal-drawn no-till planters for smallholders. Input Sustainable Agriculture (LEISA) concept, which is critical for household food security of around 3 million smallholder families in South Africa. It simply means that CA could sustain yields (and household food supply) on acceptable high levels with a minimum amount of external inputs, i.e. only those who are accessible (available and affordable) to smallholders. that CA systems generate in terms of yield, sustainability of land use, incomes, timeliness of cropping practices, ease of farming and ecosystem services, the area under CA systems has been growing exponentially in many countries, largely as a result of the initiative of farmers and their organizations. In South Africa, CA is only now being “mainstreamed” in agricultural development programmes, to be backed by suitable policies and institutional support. Although the total area under CA i s still small relative to areas farmed using tillage, there is a significant upswing in the number of innovative farmers (commercial and smallholder) practising CA successfully, as well as key research and development initiatives promising significant success in promoting it. Because of the multiple benefits Sunflower in oats residue. Photo: FrancoisFouche ways and quantities that do not interfere with, or disrupt, the biological processes. No-till soyabeans in maize residues. Photo: Andre de Villiers