Publication | Open Access
LAND DEGRADATION IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD: ISSUES AND POLICY OPTIONS FOR 2020
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1997
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EngineeringLand UseSustainable DevelopmentAgricultural EconomicsSustainable Land UseLand DegradationEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesPlant CassavaAgricultural Land UseSoil Nutrient ManagementLand-use PlanningLand RehabilitationLand Use PlanningLand DevelopmentRegenerative AgricultureGeographySoil DegradationAgricultureDeforestationSoil ErosionLand ManagementSustainable Land-use ManagementNatural Resource EconomicsPolicy Options
Land degradation takes a number of forms, including depletion of soil nutrients, salinization, agrochemical pollution, soil erosion, vegetative degradation as a result of overgrazing, and the cutting of forests for farmland. All of these types of degradation cause a decline in the productive capacity of the land, reducing potential yields. Farmers may need to use more inputs such as fertilizer or manure in order to maintain yields, or they may temporarily or permanently abandon some plots. Degradation may also induce farmers to convert land to lower-value uses. For example, farmers may plant cassava, which demands few nutrients, instead of maize, or convert cropland to grazing land.