Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania

Agricultural technologies have boosted crop yield increases and household incomes, particularly, during the Green Revolution in Asia and some parts of Sub-Sahara Africa. However, adoption of yield enhancing technologies in the vegetable subsector is still low, particularly within smallholder farms....

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Autores principales: Ochieng, J., Afari-Sefa, Victor, Lukumay, Philipo J., Muthoni, F., Dominick, I.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Society for Horticultural Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106333
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author Ochieng, J.
Afari-Sefa, Victor
Lukumay, Philipo J.
Muthoni, F.
Dominick, I.
author_browse Afari-Sefa, Victor
Dominick, I.
Lukumay, Philipo J.
Muthoni, F.
Ochieng, J.
author_facet Ochieng, J.
Afari-Sefa, Victor
Lukumay, Philipo J.
Muthoni, F.
Dominick, I.
author_sort Ochieng, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Agricultural technologies have boosted crop yield increases and household incomes, particularly, during the Green Revolution in Asia and some parts of Sub-Sahara Africa. However, adoption of yield enhancing technologies in the vegetable subsector is still low, particularly within smallholder farms. The Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation (Africa RISING) has tested and promoted the adoption of external low-input strategies such as 1) using good elite seeds and healthy vegetable seedlings; 2) inorganic fertilizers; 3) good agronomic practices – GAP (i.e., mulching, timely weeding, timely planting, organic manure application, intercropping, crop rotation, etc.); 4) integrated pest management – IPM (cultural, chemical control and biological-using trap crops). Based on a sampled survey of 310 farm households from five villages, we used both qualitative and quantitative methods to describe the dynamics of farmers’ adoption of vegetable technologies and analyse factors influencing technology choice in Babati District located in the Manyara region, Tanzania. Findings show that farmers adopt technologies that are convenient to them and the decision to apply them is influenced by various socio-economic factors. We therefore provide policy-related recommendations that current and future technology scaling programs may consider to increase the adoption and sustainable use of vegetable production technologies among smallholder farmers to address food and nutrition insecurity challenges in developing countries.
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publishDate 2019
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spelling CGSpace1063332024-08-27T10:37:02Z Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania Ochieng, J. Afari-Sefa, Victor Lukumay, Philipo J. Muthoni, F. Dominick, I. innovation adoption yields vegetables intensification farming systems smallholders farmers Agricultural technologies have boosted crop yield increases and household incomes, particularly, during the Green Revolution in Asia and some parts of Sub-Sahara Africa. However, adoption of yield enhancing technologies in the vegetable subsector is still low, particularly within smallholder farms. The Africa Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation (Africa RISING) has tested and promoted the adoption of external low-input strategies such as 1) using good elite seeds and healthy vegetable seedlings; 2) inorganic fertilizers; 3) good agronomic practices – GAP (i.e., mulching, timely weeding, timely planting, organic manure application, intercropping, crop rotation, etc.); 4) integrated pest management – IPM (cultural, chemical control and biological-using trap crops). Based on a sampled survey of 310 farm households from five villages, we used both qualitative and quantitative methods to describe the dynamics of farmers’ adoption of vegetable technologies and analyse factors influencing technology choice in Babati District located in the Manyara region, Tanzania. Findings show that farmers adopt technologies that are convenient to them and the decision to apply them is influenced by various socio-economic factors. We therefore provide policy-related recommendations that current and future technology scaling programs may consider to increase the adoption and sustainable use of vegetable production technologies among smallholder farmers to address food and nutrition insecurity challenges in developing countries. 2019-10 2019-12-26T08:35:22Z 2019-12-26T08:35:22Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106333 en Limited Access International Society for Horticultural Science Ochieng, J., Afari-Sefa, V., Lukumay, P.J., Dominick, I. and Muthoni, F. 2019. Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania. Acta Horticulturae 1255:31.
spellingShingle innovation adoption
yields
vegetables
intensification
farming systems
smallholders
farmers
Ochieng, J.
Afari-Sefa, Victor
Lukumay, Philipo J.
Muthoni, F.
Dominick, I.
Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title_full Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title_fullStr Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title_short Smallholder farmers' adoption of vegetable production technologies in Babati District, Tanzania
title_sort smallholder farmers adoption of vegetable production technologies in babati district tanzania
topic innovation adoption
yields
vegetables
intensification
farming systems
smallholders
farmers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106333
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