This farming system, typical of areas of limited agricultural potential due to lack of rain or low night or winter temperatures, covers a vast land area, around 3.5 billion ha including north and west Africa, particularly much of India, China and Indonesia. Yet it supports only a relatively modest agricultural population of around 500 million. Such systems are based on mixed farming systems or pastoral activities, merging eventually into sparse and often dispersed systems with low productivity due to environmental constraints including nutrient poor soils, low temperatures and lack of rainfall (FAO, 2003).
The pastoral farming system found at the southern boundary of the Pampas in Patagonia is an example of a rain fed dry/cold system. Sheep and cattle ranching is the main farming activity as the lack of rainfall prevents the growth of crops (FAO, 1998).
Another example of this system is in western Kenya. The Teso, Vihiga and Kakamega districts of Kenya are areas with high potential for agriculture. Farm sizes range from 0.5 to 2.0 hectares on average, ranging from subsistence to cash crop farms. The main crops grown are maize, beans, sorghum and cassava. Fertiliser use ranges from nil in the Nakasongol district of Uganda, to 101 kg/ha per year in the Busia district of Kenya (Fermont et al, 2008). In a study by Tittonell et al (2008), soils have been categorised as fertile (22%), average (40%) and poor (38%) based on a sample of 60 farms in the region. The study concludes that soils considered as poor by farmers were given very little input. This is typical of farming across western Kenya (Tittonell et al, 2008).
The future of the smallholder dry and cold system is likely to continue to be affected by environmental degradation such as soil infertility, poor water quality and monocropping, which make ecosystems less resilient to stress than more diverse agricultural systems (FAO, 2008).
Changes in this farming system have been felt by local farmers themselves. In Zimbabwe for example, local farmers have seen changes in rainfall patterns and yields. Weather is becoming less predictable, making it difficult to know when to plant crops. In addition, local farmers suggest that soils have become less fertile and as a result harvests have fallen.
Meterological Office statistics for Zimbabwe indicate that annual mean temperature increased by around 0.4 degrees Celsius between 1900 and 2000 (African Agriculture, 2009).. As well as this, by 2080 annual rainfall will average 5-18% below the 1961-1990 average of 634.8 mm.
Table 10. Characteristics of smallholder dry and cold production systems
Regions
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Importance in region
|
Farm Size (ha)
|
Crop types
|
Livestock types
| Inputs, kg/ ha N, P K, other agrochemicals |
Main environmental concerns
|
Latin America
|
Parts of NE Brazil (20%) and Argentina, southern boundary of the Pampas in Patagonia; Yucatan peninsula of Mexico (17 m hectares)
|
Larger farms produce maize
|
Cassava, maize, rainfed rice, beans on a subsistence basis
|
Sheep and goats in NE Brazil; cattle ranching.
|
|
Lack of rainfall soil infertility, poor water quality and monocropping, which make ecosystems less resilient to stress than diverse agricultural systems
|
N Africa & Middle-East
|
Predominant – Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Yemen; covers much of middle east including Kazakhstan, Kyrgiz Republic, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
|
1-3 ha
|
Wheat and barley; roots and tubers, pulses
|
Small stocks of sheep and few cattle (88 million head in 2000), pigs (78 million heads in 2000), poultry (1111 millions head in 2000).
|
In Saudi Arabia, fertiliser consumption in 2006 was 340 kg * 10^6. This is a low level of fertiliser use.
In Morrocco, this same figure was 451kg * 10^6 (WRI, 2009)
|
Sub-Saharan Africa
|
Covers Namibia, Botswana, Angola and Zambia.
Western Kenya, Africa. The Teso, Vihiga and Kakamega districts of Kenya
In west Africa, the system covers much of Mali, Niger and Mauritania, where farming is minimal
|
0.5 to 2.0 ha on average
|
Maize, beans, sorghum and cassava.
In Mali, Niger and Mauritania, there are less than 90 plant growing days per year so crop farming is minimal – mean cultivation is only 4.5%
|
Pastoral farming is the main activity based on grassland-arid and semi-arid systems of Mali, Niger and Mauritania. Livestock include cattle, sheep, goats
|
0 kg per year in the Nakasongol district of Uganda, to 101 kg per year in the Busia district of Kenya
In Zambia, fertiliser consumption in 2006 was 73 kg * 10^6, representing a very low level of fertiliser use.
|
South Asia
|
Covers much of India - the NW Himalayan region and the western deserts of India
|
Pastoral nomads without farms;
Cooperative dairy farming with average of 2-5 cows per farm
70 million households produce milk
|
Cereals,
Dairy cows and buffaloes
|
Sheep, camel, mountain goats
|
|
East Asia
|
China
|
Pig, poultry, sheep, cattle, buffalo, goat
|
|
|
|
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