Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers

The innovation process involved on-farm testing of 12 chicken strains with 6,348 households living in diverse ago-ecologies of the three countries. Data were collected on traits and, together with a farmer trait preference study, used to develop evidence-based recommendations on the best chicken str...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/123363
_version_ 1855528159413272576
author CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
author_browse CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
author_facet CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
author_sort CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The innovation process involved on-farm testing of 12 chicken strains with 6,348 households living in diverse ago-ecologies of the three countries. Data were collected on traits and, together with a farmer trait preference study, used to develop evidence-based recommendations on the best chicken strains to be promoted in each country.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace123363
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1233632023-03-14T12:02:50Z Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers CGIAR Research Program on Livestock farmers households development breeds innovation rural development data identification systems testing agrifood systems strains countries smallholder farmers The innovation process involved on-farm testing of 12 chicken strains with 6,348 households living in diverse ago-ecologies of the three countries. Data were collected on traits and, together with a farmer trait preference study, used to develop evidence-based recommendations on the best chicken strains to be promoted in each country. 2019-12-31 2022-10-06T14:34:02Z 2022-10-06T14:34:02Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/123363 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Research Program on Livestock. 2019. Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers. Reported in Livestock Annual Report 2019. Innovations.
spellingShingle farmers
households
development
breeds
innovation
rural development
data
identification
systems
testing
agrifood systems
strains
countries
smallholder farmers
CGIAR Research Program on Livestock
Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title_full Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title_fullStr Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title_full_unstemmed Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title_short Identification of more productive, resilient and farmer-preferred chicken breeds for Ethiopian, Tanzanian and Nigerian smallholder farmers
title_sort identification of more productive resilient and farmer preferred chicken breeds for ethiopian tanzanian and nigerian smallholder farmers
topic farmers
households
development
breeds
innovation
rural development
data
identification
systems
testing
agrifood systems
strains
countries
smallholder farmers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/123363
work_keys_str_mv AT cgiarresearchprogramonlivestock identificationofmoreproductiveresilientandfarmerpreferredchickenbreedsforethiopiantanzanianandnigeriansmallholderfarmers