Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)

Sustained livestock productivity in semiarid central Tanzania is limited by availability of quality feeds of sufficient amount, especially during the off season. High scarcity of fuelwood for cooking energy is another developmental challenge in the area. Limited energy can adversely affect soil fert...

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Autores principales: Sokoine University of Agriculture, University of Dodoma
Formato: Conjunto de datos
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144567
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author Sokoine University of Agriculture
University of Dodoma
author_browse Sokoine University of Agriculture
University of Dodoma
author_facet Sokoine University of Agriculture
University of Dodoma
author_sort Sokoine University of Agriculture
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustained livestock productivity in semiarid central Tanzania is limited by availability of quality feeds of sufficient amount, especially during the off season. High scarcity of fuelwood for cooking energy is another developmental challenge in the area. Limited energy can adversely affect soil fertility as farmers use crop residues and/or manure as a source of energy. to address these developmental challenges and build resilience of farming systems, Africa RISING is screening local species for fodder quality and introducing fast growing N-rich fodder trees/shrubs in various niches (contour bunds, woodlots, shelterbelts) on-farm to supply supplementary high quality fodder and other benefits like fuelwood, erosion control and soil fertility improvement. Local browse tree species have been screened for fodder quality and best species identified in a recently published journal article. Additional data is being collected to estimate fodder and fuelwood production from planted tree species on-farm. Project title: Intensification of Maize-Legume Based Systems in the Semi-Arid Areas of Tanzania to Increase Farm Productivity and Improve Farming Natural Resource Base. Project abstract: The aim of the Africa RISING project in Kongwa and Kiteto Districts, Tanzania is to provide a scientific basis for sustainably intensifying agricultural production in semi-arid areas of central Tanzania. The project activities are falls under 4 thematic areas that address three critical elements of sustainable intensification (SI), i.e. genetic, ecological and socio-economic intensification technologies. The scope of activities being implemented includes packaging of new legume and cereal varieties with over 120% yield advantage, packaging and validation of integrated productivity enhancing technologies for cereals, legumes, legume trees and soil health technologies, food safety primarily to reduce aflatoxin contamination and integration of livestock into the cropping systems. The innovation platform is used to set R4D priority in the active sites. In the 2013-2014 season, we reached out to about 1217 farmers Kongwa and Kiteto districts. In 2014 we plan to reach out to about 1500 new farmers. The project team is comprised of national partners (e.g. ARI-Hombolo, District Agricultural Officers, SUA, and UDOM) and CG Partners (CIMMYT, and ICRAF) under the leadership of ICRISAT. Project website: http://africa-rising.net
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spelling CGSpace1445672025-04-24T19:52:51Z Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt) Sokoine University of Agriculture University of Dodoma forage Sustained livestock productivity in semiarid central Tanzania is limited by availability of quality feeds of sufficient amount, especially during the off season. High scarcity of fuelwood for cooking energy is another developmental challenge in the area. Limited energy can adversely affect soil fertility as farmers use crop residues and/or manure as a source of energy. to address these developmental challenges and build resilience of farming systems, Africa RISING is screening local species for fodder quality and introducing fast growing N-rich fodder trees/shrubs in various niches (contour bunds, woodlots, shelterbelts) on-farm to supply supplementary high quality fodder and other benefits like fuelwood, erosion control and soil fertility improvement. Local browse tree species have been screened for fodder quality and best species identified in a recently published journal article. Additional data is being collected to estimate fodder and fuelwood production from planted tree species on-farm. Project title: Intensification of Maize-Legume Based Systems in the Semi-Arid Areas of Tanzania to Increase Farm Productivity and Improve Farming Natural Resource Base. Project abstract: The aim of the Africa RISING project in Kongwa and Kiteto Districts, Tanzania is to provide a scientific basis for sustainably intensifying agricultural production in semi-arid areas of central Tanzania. The project activities are falls under 4 thematic areas that address three critical elements of sustainable intensification (SI), i.e. genetic, ecological and socio-economic intensification technologies. The scope of activities being implemented includes packaging of new legume and cereal varieties with over 120% yield advantage, packaging and validation of integrated productivity enhancing technologies for cereals, legumes, legume trees and soil health technologies, food safety primarily to reduce aflatoxin contamination and integration of livestock into the cropping systems. The innovation platform is used to set R4D priority in the active sites. In the 2013-2014 season, we reached out to about 1217 farmers Kongwa and Kiteto districts. In 2014 we plan to reach out to about 1500 new farmers. The project team is comprised of national partners (e.g. ARI-Hombolo, District Agricultural Officers, SUA, and UDOM) and CG Partners (CIMMYT, and ICRAF) under the leadership of ICRISAT. Project website: http://africa-rising.net 2016 2024-06-04T09:44:17Z 2024-06-04T09:44:17Z Dataset https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144567 en Open Access International Food Policy Research Institute Sokoine University of Agriculture; University of Dodoma. 2016. Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt). Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/F4ROMK. Harvard Dataverse. Version 1.
spellingShingle forage
Sokoine University of Agriculture
University of Dodoma
Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title_full Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title_fullStr Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title_full_unstemmed Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title_short Africa RISING- Integrated Livestock and Crop Management (Shelterbelt)
title_sort africa rising integrated livestock and crop management shelterbelt
topic forage
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/144567
work_keys_str_mv AT sokoineuniversityofagriculture africarisingintegratedlivestockandcropmanagementshelterbelt
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