Transcript Slide 1

Type A: spread;y distributed;
Tipe B: continuous with almost clear border
Type C: continuous with very clear border
m asl: meters above sea level
Source: Agriculture land resource statistics (Soil and Agroclimate Research Centre, 1997)
Reappraisal of Land and Water Conservation Farming in Slope Upland
Areas for Sustainable Agriculture in Indonesia
AGUS HERMAWAN1,3, SHAHBAZ MUSHTAQ1,2, MOHSIN HAFEEZ1
1International
Centre of Water for Food Security, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia
2Australian Centre for Sustainable Catchments, University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Qld, Australia
3Assessment Institute for Agricultural Technologies, Central Java, Indonesia
Facts:
 About 45 percent of Indonesian land located on slope and hilly areas with elevation ranged from 350 to 1500 meter above sea level.
 The huge rainfall volume (>1500 mm/year) in several months.
 Population growth forces farmers to cultivate in steep slope upland by replacing native vegetation to annual crops with less soil conservation
consideration.
Results:
 land slides and soil erosion in the upland areas  critical/marginal land, Marginal upland increasing rate: 400.000 hectares per year
 80 watersheds were in critical condition due to erosion and 36 out of which were in priorities rank (11 in Java island)
 upland productivity and economic viability tends to decrease
 poverty of upland farmers
 negative externality: sedimentation in rivers, dams and water canals system caused severe flood in rainy and drought in dry seasons
 reducing lowland agricultural production.
Roots of upland problems:
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Less priority of upland development programs (compare to wetland), centralized and sectoral approach of government policies in the past,
High erosion potency in upland (high intensity of rainfall, steep land, non-proper cropping pattern)
Low productivity and small size of land ownership (0.3 - 2 hectares per farmer)  lack of capital and less farmers motivation
Extensions were inhibited by socio culture, infrastructure, and subsistence farming orientation
 Need to develop land and water conservation farming to avoid land degradation and the lost of productive land, as well as to increase
farmers welfare
 Conservation farming system: integration of agriculture farming and conservation activities in upland area (hilly/mountainous)
Considerations :
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sources of critical land problems
critical land status
soil characteristics and erodibility level
climate
socio economic status
Problems of conservation farming: low adoption rate
(example: adoption rate of bench terrace: 33%).
Integrated watershed management/IWM
 promising :
a comprehensive approach, multi-resource management planning
process in which link all stakeholders hand in hand:
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negotiate and define their interests,
set priorities,
evaluate alternatives,
Implement ,
monitor outcomes
Contact:
Dr. Shahbaz Mushtaq
Dr. Mohsin Hafeez
Research Fellow
Ph: (+617) 4631 2019
E-mail: [email protected]
Director, IC Water
Ph: (+612) 6933 2542
E-mail: [email protected]
International Centre of Water for Food Security
Charles Sturt University
Locked Bag 588, Building 24
Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650
Australia
Ph: +612-6933 2989
Fax: +612-6933 2647
http://www.icwater.or