Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya

Brachiaria grass is a “climate smart” forage that produces high amount of palatable and nutritious biomass for livestock and performs well in infertile soils, sequesters carbon in soil, and provides several environmental benefits. The objective of the study was to validate the productivity of Brachi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Njarui, D.M.G., Gatheru, M., Ghimire, Sita R.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110465
_version_ 1855529448792653824
author Njarui, D.M.G.
Gatheru, M.
Ghimire, Sita R.
author_browse Gatheru, M.
Ghimire, Sita R.
Njarui, D.M.G.
author_facet Njarui, D.M.G.
Gatheru, M.
Ghimire, Sita R.
author_sort Njarui, D.M.G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Brachiaria grass is a “climate smart” forage that produces high amount of palatable and nutritious biomass for livestock and performs well in infertile soils, sequesters carbon in soil, and provides several environmental benefits. The objective of the study was to validate the productivity of Brachiaria grass and upscale the suitable cultivars for improved livestock feed resources in Kenya. We assume integrating Brachiaria grass into mixed crop-livestock system will enhance feed availability and livestock productivity, leading to increased food and nutrition security. Farmer participatory approach was adopted to evaluate and promote four Brachiaria grass (Brachiaria decumbens cv. Basilisk, B. brizantha cvs. Xaraes, Piata, and MG-4) in the Central Highland and Eastern Midland of Kenya. The extension/advisory approaches used to promote Brachiaria grass cultivars included field days, village knowledge centres, agricultural shows, posters, and linkages with other institutions through multi-actor platform established under the InnovAfrica project. Generally, Brachiaria grass cultivars were more productive than the control (Rhodes grass) in most harvests reaching peak of 5.1–7.7 t/ha in the fifth harvest. For Rhodes grass, DM was less than 4 t/ha in all harvest and died by sixth harvest. Similarly, based on farmers’ evaluation using phenotypic traits, the Brachiaria grass cultivars had higher score than Rhodes grass except cv. Piata. The mean score ranged from 2.75 to 3.19 for Brachiaria cultivars, while for Rhodes the mean score was 2.63. Within 2 years of intervention, over 4000 farmers in the 2 project sites and additional 1500 farmers from other parts of the country have planted the Brachiaria grass. The demand for Brachiaria grass seeds is increasing due to benefits gained, e.g., increased milk production from dairy cattle fed on the grass. Our study will quantify the associated benefits from cultivation of Brachiaria grass with respect to a set of ecological, food and nutrition security, and social-economic indicators.
format Book Chapter
id CGSpace110465
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Springer
publisherStr Springer
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1104652025-02-27T08:39:36Z Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya Njarui, D.M.G. Gatheru, M. Ghimire, Sita R. climate-smart agriculture livestock production brachiaria animal feeding feeds forage resilience Brachiaria grass is a “climate smart” forage that produces high amount of palatable and nutritious biomass for livestock and performs well in infertile soils, sequesters carbon in soil, and provides several environmental benefits. The objective of the study was to validate the productivity of Brachiaria grass and upscale the suitable cultivars for improved livestock feed resources in Kenya. We assume integrating Brachiaria grass into mixed crop-livestock system will enhance feed availability and livestock productivity, leading to increased food and nutrition security. Farmer participatory approach was adopted to evaluate and promote four Brachiaria grass (Brachiaria decumbens cv. Basilisk, B. brizantha cvs. Xaraes, Piata, and MG-4) in the Central Highland and Eastern Midland of Kenya. The extension/advisory approaches used to promote Brachiaria grass cultivars included field days, village knowledge centres, agricultural shows, posters, and linkages with other institutions through multi-actor platform established under the InnovAfrica project. Generally, Brachiaria grass cultivars were more productive than the control (Rhodes grass) in most harvests reaching peak of 5.1–7.7 t/ha in the fifth harvest. For Rhodes grass, DM was less than 4 t/ha in all harvest and died by sixth harvest. Similarly, based on farmers’ evaluation using phenotypic traits, the Brachiaria grass cultivars had higher score than Rhodes grass except cv. Piata. The mean score ranged from 2.75 to 3.19 for Brachiaria cultivars, while for Rhodes the mean score was 2.63. Within 2 years of intervention, over 4000 farmers in the 2 project sites and additional 1500 farmers from other parts of the country have planted the Brachiaria grass. The demand for Brachiaria grass seeds is increasing due to benefits gained, e.g., increased milk production from dairy cattle fed on the grass. Our study will quantify the associated benefits from cultivation of Brachiaria grass with respect to a set of ecological, food and nutrition security, and social-economic indicators. 2020-06-01 2020-12-11T11:27:14Z 2020-12-11T11:27:14Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110465 en Open Access Springer Njarui, D.M.G., Gatheru, M. and Ghimire, S.R. 2020. Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya. IN: Leal Filho, W., Ogugu, N., Adelake L., Ayal D. and Silva, I. da (eds.). 2020. African handbook of climate change adaptation. Cham: Springer
spellingShingle climate-smart agriculture
livestock production
brachiaria
animal feeding
feeds
forage
resilience
Njarui, D.M.G.
Gatheru, M.
Ghimire, Sita R.
Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title_full Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title_fullStr Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title_short Brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in Kenya
title_sort brachiaria grass for climate resilient and sustainable livestock production in kenya
topic climate-smart agriculture
livestock production
brachiaria
animal feeding
feeds
forage
resilience
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110465
work_keys_str_mv AT njaruidmg brachiariagrassforclimateresilientandsustainablelivestockproductioninkenya
AT gatherum brachiariagrassforclimateresilientandsustainablelivestockproductioninkenya
AT ghimiresitar brachiariagrassforclimateresilientandsustainablelivestockproductioninkenya