Tag: innovation adoption
Adoption of improved fallow technology for soil fertility management in Zambia: Empirical studies and emerging issues
In the subsistence-agricultural region of eastern Zambia, less than 10% of the households have adequate supply of maize (Zea mays L.), the staple food, throughout the year. A major constraint to increasing crop production in the region is poor fertility status of the soil. In order to address this problem, improved fallow has been introduced as a technology for improving soil fertility within a short span of two to three years. Farmers have been testing the technology and a number of empirical studies have been undertaken over the years to identify the factors influencing farmers’ decision to adopt the technology. This paper presents a synthesis of the results of adoption studies and highlights generic issues on the adoption of improved fallows in Zambia. The synthesis indicates that farmers’ decision on technology adoption does not have a simple directed relationship of some technological characteristics only, but constitutes a matrix of factors including household characteristics, community level factors, socioeconomic constraints and incentives that farmers face, access to information, local institutional arrangements and macro policies on agriculture. The adoption of improved fallows is not strictly speaking a binary choice problem but a continuous process in which farmers occupy a position along a continuum in the adoption path. Further, adoption of improved fallows may not take place in a policy vacuum but needs to be facilitated by appropriate and conducive policy and institutional incentives. Several questions and issues that require further study emerge from the synthesis. These include determination of the relative importance of the factors in the adoption matrix, identification of the conditions under which farmers use a combination of inputs and their profitability under changing price scenarios, exact definition to delineate between `non-adopters’, `testers’ and `adopters’ of agroforestry technologies, and understanding the impact of cash crop farming in farmers’ adoption decisions of improved fallows (where off farm opportunities exist). Further, there is a need to determine the inter-relationship between household poverty, labor availability and the adoption of improved fallows and, to evaluate a combination of policy interventions at both national and local level to promote the adoption of agroforestry-based soil fertility management.
Agroforestry innovations and livelihood enhancement: kecamatan Nanggung, West Java (Halimun Project) (English ver.2)
Local farmers on or below the poverty line with access to less than 1 hectares of land. Farmers havepoor access to extension services and market opportunities. Government agencies fear communities willconvert surrounding forest area (TNGH) which has high biodiversity and is the major watershed for Jakarta
Calliandra calothyrsus: assessing the early stages of adoption of a fodder tree in the highlands of central Kenya
The paper examines the early stages of adoption of Calliandra calothyrsus, a leguminous fodder tree, among smallholder dairy producers in the highlands of central Kenya. The main objectives of the study were: to examine the expansion of calliandra planting by farmers; to document farmers’ experiences and assessments in testing, managing and using the tree; to determine the economic impact of calliandra from farmers’ perspective and to provide feedback to research, extension and policy makers on issues which need to be examined for the improvement and promotion of calliandra as a fodder crop It starts by describing the study area, then summarises the research on the management of calliandra as a fodder tree and as a feed for dairy cows. Next the survey methods are described and the results and conclusions are presented.
Assessing the adoption potential of agroforestry practices: ICRAF’s experiences in sub-saharan African
This paper describes the participatory approach and methods that ICRAF and partner-institutions use of assessing the adoption potential of agroforestry practices, that is, their biophysical performance, profitability, and acceptability to farmers. The information required for assessing adoption potential is presented. Three types of on-farm trials– researcher-designed and managed, researcher-designed and farmer-managed, and farmer-designed and managed — are examined and their relative suitability for different objectives is assessed. Next, methods for assessing adoption potential are presented, using seven case studies from four study areas in sub-Saharan Africa. Finally, an example is presented of comparing the adoption potential of improved tree fallows across sites for assessing the boundary conditions of the practice, that is, the circumstances that determine whether the practice is likely to be adopted. Assessments of adoption potential improve the efficiency of the technology development and dissemination process, help document the progress made in disseminating new practices, demonstrate the impact of investing in technology development, facilitate inter-institutional cooperation, and help to identify the factors contributing to successful technology development programs as well as the constraints limiting the achievements.
Apiculture and agroforestry development in the miombos, western Tanzania
Tanzania International Centre for Research on Agroforestry (ICRAF) Agroforestry Research Project started in Tabora in 1986 and in Shinyanga in 1991. This was in response to the massive environmental degradation due tod deforestation efforts that were geared to the eradication of tse tse flies and quelea quelea birds in Shinyanga Region and for tobacco curing in Tabora Region. The other problems were desclining soil fertility and shortage of dry season fodder for domestic animals.
Agricultural intensification, deforestation and the environment: assessing tradeoffs in Sumatra, Indonesia
The conditions necessary for increased productivity of agroforestry and other land uses to jointly reduce poverty and deforestation are not well understood. The global Alternatives to Slash-and-Burn (ASB) Programme was founded to provide scientific insights and workable innovations for the simultaneous pursuit of precisely these two goals: poverty reduction and rain forest conservation in the tropics. This chapter summarizes results from study sites on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, which were chosen to represent the lowland humid tropical forest zone in Asia for the global ASB project.