African farmers grow trees as a natural crop fertilizer [View all]
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Making-a-difference/Change-Agent/2012/0501/African-farmers-grow-trees-as-a-natural-crop-fertilizer

A farmer inspects his crop at his farm in Senekal, in South Africa's Eastern Free State. Thousands of African farmers are planting trees among their crops to add nitrogen without the need for expensive fertilizers.
Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters/File
Among the most challenging long-term barriers to agricultural production and sustainability in Africa is poor and degrading soil quality.
According to Agricultural success from Africa: the case of fertilizer tree systems in southern Africa (Malawi, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe), a report from the International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability, simple Fertilizer Tree Systems (FTS) can double maize (corn) production in soil that is low in nitrogen, an essential plant nutrient.
A type of agroforestry, FTS incorporate nitrogen-fixing trees and shrubs into agricultural fields, usually inter-planted with food crops. These trees take in atmospheric nitrogen and return it to the soil, where it serves as a nutrient for plants.
Soil analyses by the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and others in the 1980s revealed nitrogen to be a limiting factor in many African soils. In response, on-farm studies in the 1990s showed that FTS, with the right species, could increase crop yields with or without mineral fertilizers.
FTS are much cheaper for farmers to implement than buying fertilizer and represent a more holistic approach to soil management. FTS scaling-up programs were broadly implemented about 10 years ago, and in that time the number of small farmers using these techniques has ballooned from a few hundred to more than 250,000 in Malawi, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
FTS have proven most effective for small farmers who are able to devote the necessary labor and land more easily than raise the money needed for commercial fertilizer. By relying on naturally occurring systems rather than imports, agroforestry improves food security, bolsters biodiversity, and reinforces local economies.