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Soils, Science and Community ActioN (SoilSCAN): a citizen science tool to empower community-led land management change in East Africa

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dc.creator Kelly, Claire
dc.creator Wynants, Maarten
dc.creator Patrick, Aloyce
dc.creator Taylor, Alex
dc.creator Mkilema, Francis
dc.creator Nasseri, Mona
dc.creator Lewin, Shaun
dc.creator Munishi, Linus
dc.creator Mtei, Kelvin
dc.creator Ndakidemi, Patrick
dc.creator Blake, William
dc.date 2022-08-09T06:59:19Z
dc.date 2022-08-09T06:59:19Z
dc.date 2022-08-02
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T09:24:39Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T09:24:39Z
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac8300
dc.identifier https://dspace.nm-aist.ac.tz/handle/20.500.12479/1468
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/95650
dc.description This research article was published IOPscience, 2022
dc.description Pastoralist communities worldwide face complex challenges regarding food and feed productivity. Primary production systems are under stress, nutritional choices are changing and the relationship between development and agriculture is undergoing profound transformation. Under increasing pressure from climate and land use change, East African agro-pastoral systems are approaching a tipping point in terms of land degradation. There is an urgent need for evidence-led sustainable land management interventions to reverse degradation of natural resources that support food and water security. A key barrier, however, is a lack of high spatial resolution soil health data wherein collecting such information for each individual community is beyond their means. In this context, we tested whether bridging such data gaps could be achieved through a coordinated programme at the boundary between participation and citizen science. Key outputs included a community-led trial of a hand-held soil scanner, which highlighted a range of positive benefits and practical challenges in using this technology in this context, with identification of some potential solutions; and a targeted soil organic matter and nutrient status dataset in a small catchment-based community setting. The results show that if the practical challenges can be resolved, use of portable soil scanner technology has the potential to fill key knowledge gaps and thereby improve resilience to the threat of land degradation through locally responsive farmer and community decision-making.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher IOPscience
dc.subject Citizen science
dc.subject Soil erosion
dc.subject Agritech
dc.title Soils, Science and Community ActioN (SoilSCAN): a citizen science tool to empower community-led land management change in East Africa
dc.type Article


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