Ibra Touré
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ibra Touré.
Journal of Arid Land | 2017
Mohamed Habibou Assouma; Dominique Serça; Frédéric Guérin; Vincent Blanfort; Philippe Lecomte; Ibra Touré; Alexandre Ickowicz; Raphaël Manlay; Martial Bernoux; Jonathan Vayssières
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the surface soils and surface water receiving animal excreta may be important components of the GHG balance of terrestrial ecosystems, but the associated processes are poorly documented in tropical environments, especially in tropical arid and semi-arid areas. A typical sylvo-pastoral landscape in the semi-arid zone of Senegal, West Africa, was investigated in this study. The study area (706 km² of managed pastoral land) was a circular zone with a radius of 15 km centered on a borehole used to water livestock. The landscape supports a stocking rate ranging from 0.11 to 0.39 tropical livestock units per hectare depending on the seasonal movements of the livestock. Six landscape units were investigated (land in the vicinity of the borehole, natural ponds, natural rangelands, forest plantations, settlements, and enclosed plots). Carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane (CH4) fluxes were measured with static chambers set up at 13 sites covering the six landscape units, and the 13 sites are assumed to be representative of the spatial heterogeneity of the emissions. A total of 216 fluxes were measured during the one-year study period (May 2014 to April 2015). At the landscape level, soils and surface water emitted an average 19.8 t C-CO2 eq/(hm²•a) (CO2: 82%, N2O: 15%, and CH4: 3%), but detailed results revealed notable spatial heterogeneity of GHG emissions. CO2 fluxes ranged from 1148.2 (±91.6) mg/(m²•d) in rangelands to 97,980.2 (±14,861.7) mg/(m²•d) in surface water in the vicinity of the borehole. N2O fluxes ranged from 0.6 (±0.1) mg/(m²•d) in forest plantations to 22.6 (±10.8) mg/(m²•d) in the vicinity of the borehole. CH4 fluxes ranged from–3.2 (±0.3) mg/(m²•d) in forest plantations to 8788.5 (±2295.9) mg/(m²•d) from surface water in the vicinity of the borehole. This study identified GHG emission “hot spots” in the landscape. Emissions from the surface soils were significantly higher in the landscape units most frequently used by the animals, i.e., in the vicinity of the borehole and settlements; and emissions measured from surface water in the vicinity of the borehole and from natural ponds were on average about 10 times higher than soil emissions.
Bio-based and Applied Economics | 2017
Abdrahmane Wane; Ibra Touré; Aliou Diouf Mballo; Cheikh Ibrahima Nokho; Aminata Konaté Ndiaye
In a rapid rural appraisal conducted in 2012 in the Senegalese Sahel, agropastoralists of Thiel expressed their need for technical and scientific support in peanut value chain development. Value chain analysis assessed the performance of the stakeholders. Multiple correspondence analysis clarified power relationships among them. Social network analysis facilitated the understanding of social and technical relationships inside the particular node of agropastoralists. Results show that the peanut crop is both a source of cash flow (marketing) and a pillar of food (basic consumption) and feed (by-products) security. This paper also highlights a lack of convenient economic environments, mutual assistance, capacity transfer and knowledge sharing on the best agricultural practices among agropastoralists, despite their weak production performance. Agropastoralists have no influence in the peanut value chain and are dependent on decisions from other actors. Technical support and knowledge sharing appear to be key for agropastoralists to control and adopt agricultural innovations.
Mathematical and Computer Modelling | 2006
Alassane Bah; Ibra Touré; C. Le Page; A. Ickowicz; A.T. Diop
Cahiers Agricultures | 2010
Abdrahmane Wane; Véronique Ancey; Ibra Touré
Cahiers Agricultures | 2010
Alassane Bah; Ibra Touré; Christine Fourage; Ibrahima Diop Gaye; Grégoire Leclerc; Arame Soumaré; Alexandre Ickowicz; Amadou Tamsir Diop
Cahiers Agricultures | 2010
Alexandre Ickowicz; Alassane Bah; Pierre Bommel; Jean-Philippe Choisis; Michel Etienne; Annick Gibon; Jacques Lasseur; Hermes Morales; Ibra Touré; Jean-François Tourrand
Sustainability Science | 2009
Grégoire Leclerc; Alassane Bah; Bruno Barbier; Laurence Boutinot; Aurélie Botta; William’s Daré; Ibrahima Diop Gaye; Christine Fourage; Géraud Magrin; Mame Arame Soumaré; Ibra Touré
Archive | 2012
Ibra Touré; Alexandre Ickowicz; Abdrahmane Wane; Issa Garba; Pierre Gerber; Issa Atte; Jean-Daniel Cesaro; Amadou Tamsir Diop; S. Djibo; Frédéric Ham; M. Hamadoun; Y. Khamis; Ibrahima Niang; Ousman Mahamat Saleh; T Métais; Mahamadou Saley; N.A. Sow; Bernard Toutain; S. Yahaya
Agricultures | 2010
Abdrahmane Wane; Véronique Ancey; Ibra Touré; Samba Ndiobene Ka; Astou Diao-Camara
Archive | 2009
Jean-Charles Clanet; Andrew Ogilvie; A. Bilgo; Armelle Caron; Alexandre Ickowicz; Anna Lukasiewicz; Amadou Tamsir Diop; Bernard Toutain; Bertrand Muller; Billy Troy; Bruno Barbier; Charles Baubion; Camille Marquette; Christian Leduc; Claudine Dieulin; Evariste Dapola Da; David Kaczan; Françoise Elbaz-Poulichet; François Tiotsop; Gaston Liénou; Gilbert Belaud; Gil Mahé; Georges Serpantié; Isabelle Droy; Innocent Ouedraogo; I. Ousseini; Ibra Touré; Isolde De Zborowski; Jean-Claude Bader; Jean Christophe Poussin
Collaboration
Dive into the Ibra Touré's collaboration.
Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputs