Soils, human wellbeing, and equity in Africa as a goal for sustainable development
持続可能な開発目標としてのアフリカの土壌、人間の福利、公平性 (AI 翻訳)
Martin A. N. Anikwe, Martin A. N. Anikwe, Emmanuel E. Ikengannyia
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
アフリカの土壌の健康が人間の福利と持続可能な開発に果たす役割をレビュー。保全農業により作物収量20-30%増、家計収入50%増の事例を報告。気候スマート農業やアグロフォレストリーによる土壌炭素隔離、微生物多様性の重要性、ジェンダー対応型介入の効果を総合的に検討。
English
This review examines the role of soil health in human wellbeing and sustainable development in Africa, analyzing 139 articles. Key findings include 20-30% yield increases from conservation agriculture, 27-50% higher soil organic carbon with agroforestry, and 20-30% productivity gains from gender-responsive interventions. The paper emphasizes integrating indigenous knowledge and sustainable soil management for achieving SDGs.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本では土壌保全や農業の持続可能性への関心は高いが、本論文はアフリカ特有の文脈に焦点。日本の農業政策や土壌管理への直接的な示唆は限定的だが、気候変動適応策としての土壌炭素隔離の知見は参考になる。
In the global GX context
This paper contributes to global discourse on soil health as a climate solution, particularly carbon sequestration through agroforestry and conservation agriculture. It aligns with IPCC land-use frameworks and SDG targets, though its Africa-specific focus may limit direct transferability to other regions.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a comprehensive review of soil health-sustainable development linkages in Africa with quantitative ranges for yields and carbon sequestration.
🏢実務担当者:Offers evidence for adopting conservation agriculture and gender-responsive soil management to improve livelihoods and resilience in African farming communities.
🏛政策担当者:Highlights the need for integrating indigenous knowledge and sustainable soil practices into national development plans to meet SDGs.
📄 Abstract(原文)
This review examines the significance of soils in promoting human wellbeing and equity in Africa for sustainable development. Through analysis of 139 articles, the study explores connections between soil health, human welfare, and equitable development across the continent. The findings underscore the importance of soil preservation and sustainable management in enhancing food security, ecosystem resilience, climate regulation, and quality of life. The review elucidates the role of soils from environmental, social, and economic perspectives, highlighting their contributions to plant development, water regulation, and vital ecosystem functions. African soils play a crucial role in sustainable development, particularly in agriculture, water management, biodiversity conservation, cultural activities, and tourism. Key findings reveal a strong linkage between soil health and human wellbeing, with improved soil management contributing to enhanced nutrition, increased income, and better quality of life for rural communities. Conservation agriculture can increase crop yields by 20–30% and household incomes by up to 50% in some regions. Climate-smart practices, such as conservation agriculture and agroforestry, show significant potential for increasing soil carbon sequestration, enhancing water retention, and improving crop resilience to climate change. Agroforestry systems in sub-Saharan Africa can increase soil organic carbon by 27–50% compared to conventional agriculture. Soil microbial diversity plays a vital role in maintaining soil health and ecosystem services, with diverse microbial communities enhancing nutrient availability by up to 50% and increasing crop yields by 10–25%. Gender-responsive soil management interventions lead to more equitable outcomes, with studies reporting a 20–30% increase in agricultural productivity when women have equal access to resources and training. Integrating indigenous knowledge with scientific approaches has led to a 40–60% increase in the adoption of sustainable soil management strategies in some regions. These figures represent ranges from individual studies and should not be interpreted as pooled meta-analytic estimates. Across sub-Saharan Africa, where agriculture remains the primary livelihood for approximately 55–60% of the workforce, soil degradation poses a significant threat to food security, perpetuates poverty, and exacerbates inequality. The review concludes by calling for sustainable soil management practices, protecting soil ecosystems, and empowering local communities to harness the potential of African soils for a prosperous and equitable future aligned with sustainable development goals.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2026.1815134first seen 2026-05-19 04:43:14 · last seen 2026-05-30 05:00:54
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