There is now an emerging broad consensus among international institutions, United Nations agencies, aid donors, African policymakers and a considerable number of the scientific community concerned with the development of Africa about the major factors deteriorating Africa's ecosystem at an accelerating pace. Unsustainable use of forests (natural ecosystem), mechanized farming, livestock raising (rural practice) and to a lesser extent, urban practice (emission, industrial pollution, waste disposal and overcrowding factor affecting human health) have caused land degradation and will severely undermine Africa's economic future (ADB 1992, pp. 143-146; ECA/FAO 1994:53; Elamin and Ce'sar 1994, pp. ix-xii; FAO 1993:31-46; Salih 1992:2; UN 1994:22;...
The Kyoto Protocol opens new possibilities for using the biosphere as a carbon sink. Using agro-ecos...
Agricultural commodity production in a changing climate scenario is undergoing sustainability challe...
In Africa, natural resources are degrading, while being at the same time essential for maintaining o...
Scientific work on ecosystem services has been growing globally and in Africa in particular. The dep...
This paper had been presented for promotion at the university of Khartoum. To get the full text ple...
Land degradation is rampant in Africa, accounting for 46% of the total land area. Land degradation a...
Land degradation at the current pace is projected to render more than half of the cultivated land in...
Socio-economic changes in Africa have increased pressure on the continent's ecosystems. Most researc...
There is a growing evidence suggesting that the ecological degradation in Africa is accelerating fas...
Africa's lands - croplands, savannah, bush and forests - are in danger. Poor land management is resu...
The paper is a contribution from the crops and systems diversification team at the International Cro...
The relationships between people and their natural support systems, particularly trees and forests, ...
The sustainable management of natural resources in Africa is a formidable challenge yet crucial for ...
In the recent past, the image of agricultural and environmental crises in Sub- Saharan Africa (SSA) ...
In Africa, however, available evidence suggests that environmental degradation such as soil erosion,...
The Kyoto Protocol opens new possibilities for using the biosphere as a carbon sink. Using agro-ecos...
Agricultural commodity production in a changing climate scenario is undergoing sustainability challe...
In Africa, natural resources are degrading, while being at the same time essential for maintaining o...
Scientific work on ecosystem services has been growing globally and in Africa in particular. The dep...
This paper had been presented for promotion at the university of Khartoum. To get the full text ple...
Land degradation is rampant in Africa, accounting for 46% of the total land area. Land degradation a...
Land degradation at the current pace is projected to render more than half of the cultivated land in...
Socio-economic changes in Africa have increased pressure on the continent's ecosystems. Most researc...
There is a growing evidence suggesting that the ecological degradation in Africa is accelerating fas...
Africa's lands - croplands, savannah, bush and forests - are in danger. Poor land management is resu...
The paper is a contribution from the crops and systems diversification team at the International Cro...
The relationships between people and their natural support systems, particularly trees and forests, ...
The sustainable management of natural resources in Africa is a formidable challenge yet crucial for ...
In the recent past, the image of agricultural and environmental crises in Sub- Saharan Africa (SSA) ...
In Africa, however, available evidence suggests that environmental degradation such as soil erosion,...
The Kyoto Protocol opens new possibilities for using the biosphere as a carbon sink. Using agro-ecos...
Agricultural commodity production in a changing climate scenario is undergoing sustainability challe...
In Africa, natural resources are degrading, while being at the same time essential for maintaining o...