Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda

The adoption of improved seed and other planting material in developing countries is unsatisfactory, given their potential to increase agricultural productivity. To arrive at a better understanding of the observed adoption rates, it is not only relevant to know which cultivars and variety traits are...

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Autores principales: Kilwinger, Fleur B.M., Marimo, Pricilla, Rietveld, Anne M., Almekinders, Conny J.M., Dam, Ynte K. van
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107955
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author Kilwinger, Fleur B.M.
Marimo, Pricilla
Rietveld, Anne M.
Almekinders, Conny J.M.
Dam, Ynte K. van
author_browse Almekinders, Conny J.M.
Dam, Ynte K. van
Kilwinger, Fleur B.M.
Marimo, Pricilla
Rietveld, Anne M.
author_facet Kilwinger, Fleur B.M.
Marimo, Pricilla
Rietveld, Anne M.
Almekinders, Conny J.M.
Dam, Ynte K. van
author_sort Kilwinger, Fleur B.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The adoption of improved seed and other planting material in developing countries is unsatisfactory, given their potential to increase agricultural productivity. To arrive at a better understanding of the observed adoption rates, it is not only relevant to know which cultivars and variety traits are attractive to farmers: the sourcing planting material by smallholder farmers is often associated in literature with social ties and cultural norms. In this study, means‐end chain analysis was applied to understand farmers’ perceptions on formal and informal sources of banana planting material. The means‐end chain analysis allows respondents to select and verbalize their own constructs to evaluate a product or service. These personally relevant constructs are subsequently linked to their personal goals via laddering interviews. We interviewed 31 Ugandan banana farmers from Western and Central region. Farmers associated formal sources with improved cultivars, tissue culture plantlets and low levels of diversity. Informal seed sources were associated with traditional cultivars, suckers and high levels of diversity. The goals farmers pursued while acquiring planting material, such as financial gains, food security, and to sustain and develop the household, were fairly similar among farmers. Larger, male farmers and Central‐region farmers aimed and preferred to pursue these goals via different means than smaller, female and Western‐region farmers did. These differences among farmers preferences for particular sources indicate that not only cultivar traits should be tailored to farmers’ preferences and needs, but also the characteristics of the sources from which farmers access planting material.
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publishDate 2020
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spelling CGSpace1079552025-11-11T17:40:03Z Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda Kilwinger, Fleur B.M. Marimo, Pricilla Rietveld, Anne M. Almekinders, Conny J.M. Dam, Ynte K. van seeds farmers musa semilla agricultores ecology The adoption of improved seed and other planting material in developing countries is unsatisfactory, given their potential to increase agricultural productivity. To arrive at a better understanding of the observed adoption rates, it is not only relevant to know which cultivars and variety traits are attractive to farmers: the sourcing planting material by smallholder farmers is often associated in literature with social ties and cultural norms. In this study, means‐end chain analysis was applied to understand farmers’ perceptions on formal and informal sources of banana planting material. The means‐end chain analysis allows respondents to select and verbalize their own constructs to evaluate a product or service. These personally relevant constructs are subsequently linked to their personal goals via laddering interviews. We interviewed 31 Ugandan banana farmers from Western and Central region. Farmers associated formal sources with improved cultivars, tissue culture plantlets and low levels of diversity. Informal seed sources were associated with traditional cultivars, suckers and high levels of diversity. The goals farmers pursued while acquiring planting material, such as financial gains, food security, and to sustain and develop the household, were fairly similar among farmers. Larger, male farmers and Central‐region farmers aimed and preferred to pursue these goals via different means than smaller, female and Western‐region farmers did. These differences among farmers preferences for particular sources indicate that not only cultivar traits should be tailored to farmers’ preferences and needs, but also the characteristics of the sources from which farmers access planting material. 2020-06-22 2020-04-09T14:12:43Z 2020-04-09T14:12:43Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107955 en Open Access application/pdf SAGE Publications Kilwinger, F.B.M.; Marimo, P.; Rietveld, A.M.; Almekinders, C.J.M.; van Dam, Y. (2020) Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda. Outlook on Agriculture 49(2) p.119-132 ISSN: 0030-7270
spellingShingle seeds
farmers
musa
semilla
agricultores
ecology
Kilwinger, Fleur B.M.
Marimo, Pricilla
Rietveld, Anne M.
Almekinders, Conny J.M.
Dam, Ynte K. van
Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title_full Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title_fullStr Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title_short Not only the seed matters: Farmers’ perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in Uganda
title_sort not only the seed matters farmers perceptions of sources for banana planting materials in uganda
topic seeds
farmers
musa
semilla
agricultores
ecology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/107955
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