Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer

Manure has been used as a fertilizer since ancient times and if well managed it can be an asset, promoting sustainable agriculture and increasing crop production, particularly for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, most farmers in SSA do not apply recommended manure management...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ndambi, O.A., Pelster, David E., Owino, Joseph, Buisonjé, F. de, Vellinga, Theun V.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106355
_version_ 1855527764548911104
author Ndambi, O.A.
Pelster, David E.
Owino, Joseph
Buisonjé, F. de
Vellinga, Theun V.
author_browse Buisonjé, F. de
Ndambi, O.A.
Owino, Joseph
Pelster, David E.
Vellinga, Theun V.
author_facet Ndambi, O.A.
Pelster, David E.
Owino, Joseph
Buisonjé, F. de
Vellinga, Theun V.
author_sort Ndambi, O.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Manure has been used as a fertilizer since ancient times and if well managed it can be an asset, promoting sustainable agriculture and increasing crop production, particularly for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, most farmers in SSA do not apply recommended manure management practices, such as roofing animal housing, having a water-proof floor or covering manure during storage, causing large nutrient losses during manure storage, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and reducing the quality of the manure as a fertilizer. This paper compares manure management practices in representative SSA countries, and summarizes government policies and socio-cultural practices that influence the adoption of good (recommended) manure management practices. Three steps were applied in this analysis: i) review of manure management practices from various literature sources, ii) interviews on manure management practices and policies with key stakeholders from 13 SSA countries, and iii) surveys of manure management practices on small, medium and large scale farms in Ethiopia and Malawi. The review confirms the potential of manure to improve crop yields and promote sustainable agriculture in SSA. Unfortunately, most SSA countries a) do not explicitly mention manure management in their policies b) have different ministries that share responsibilities on manure management, often leading to incoherent policies and abnegation of these responsibilities c) take limited action to promote good practices or enforce legislation on manure management. Also, the field survey indicated that farmers lack knowledge on manure management. However, farmers are able to access agricultural extension services from both government and non-government agencies, although these extension services rarely included information on improved manure management practices. Extension services that encourage exchange and interaction between farmers were most successful in increasing adoption of good manure management practices, and are recommended. In addition, efforts to improve manure management in SSA should strengthen the enforcement of existing policies and provide an enabling environment for adoption of good manure management practices.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace106355
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1063552024-10-03T07:40:54Z Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer Ndambi, O.A. Pelster, David E. Owino, Joseph Buisonjé, F. de Vellinga, Theun V. greenhouse gas emissions policies organic fertilizers crops Manure has been used as a fertilizer since ancient times and if well managed it can be an asset, promoting sustainable agriculture and increasing crop production, particularly for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, most farmers in SSA do not apply recommended manure management practices, such as roofing animal housing, having a water-proof floor or covering manure during storage, causing large nutrient losses during manure storage, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and reducing the quality of the manure as a fertilizer. This paper compares manure management practices in representative SSA countries, and summarizes government policies and socio-cultural practices that influence the adoption of good (recommended) manure management practices. Three steps were applied in this analysis: i) review of manure management practices from various literature sources, ii) interviews on manure management practices and policies with key stakeholders from 13 SSA countries, and iii) surveys of manure management practices on small, medium and large scale farms in Ethiopia and Malawi. The review confirms the potential of manure to improve crop yields and promote sustainable agriculture in SSA. Unfortunately, most SSA countries a) do not explicitly mention manure management in their policies b) have different ministries that share responsibilities on manure management, often leading to incoherent policies and abnegation of these responsibilities c) take limited action to promote good practices or enforce legislation on manure management. Also, the field survey indicated that farmers lack knowledge on manure management. However, farmers are able to access agricultural extension services from both government and non-government agencies, although these extension services rarely included information on improved manure management practices. Extension services that encourage exchange and interaction between farmers were most successful in increasing adoption of good manure management practices, and are recommended. In addition, efforts to improve manure management in SSA should strengthen the enforcement of existing policies and provide an enabling environment for adoption of good manure management practices. 2019-05-08 2020-01-02T13:29:48Z 2020-01-02T13:29:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106355 en Open Access Frontiers Media Ndambi, O.A., Pelster, D.E., Owino, J.O., Buisonjé, F. de and Vellinga, T. 2019. Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 3:29.
spellingShingle greenhouse gas emissions
policies
organic fertilizers
crops
Ndambi, O.A.
Pelster, David E.
Owino, Joseph
Buisonjé, F. de
Vellinga, Theun V.
Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title_full Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title_fullStr Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title_full_unstemmed Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title_short Manure management practices and policies in sub-Saharan Africa: Implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
title_sort manure management practices and policies in sub saharan africa implications on manure quality as a fertilizer
topic greenhouse gas emissions
policies
organic fertilizers
crops
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106355
work_keys_str_mv AT ndambioa manuremanagementpracticesandpoliciesinsubsaharanafricaimplicationsonmanurequalityasafertilizer
AT pelsterdavide manuremanagementpracticesandpoliciesinsubsaharanafricaimplicationsonmanurequalityasafertilizer
AT owinojoseph manuremanagementpracticesandpoliciesinsubsaharanafricaimplicationsonmanurequalityasafertilizer
AT buisonjefde manuremanagementpracticesandpoliciesinsubsaharanafricaimplicationsonmanurequalityasafertilizer
AT vellingatheunv manuremanagementpracticesandpoliciesinsubsaharanafricaimplicationsonmanurequalityasafertilizer