Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia

While livestock plays a crucial role in the livelihoods of Ethiopian farmers and the overall economy, it also contributes to land degradation. The scarcity of land compels livestock to rely heavily on overgrazed natural pastures for feed intake. This contributes to Ethiopia’s high rates of soil eros...

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Autores principales: Notenbaert, An, Girmay, Eyuel, Mwema, Emmanuel, Bekele, Regassa, Mwendia, Solomon, Mulatu, Kalkidan
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155557
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author Notenbaert, An
Girmay, Eyuel
Mwema, Emmanuel
Bekele, Regassa
Mwendia, Solomon
Mulatu, Kalkidan
author_browse Bekele, Regassa
Girmay, Eyuel
Mulatu, Kalkidan
Mwema, Emmanuel
Mwendia, Solomon
Notenbaert, An
author_facet Notenbaert, An
Girmay, Eyuel
Mwema, Emmanuel
Bekele, Regassa
Mwendia, Solomon
Mulatu, Kalkidan
author_sort Notenbaert, An
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description While livestock plays a crucial role in the livelihoods of Ethiopian farmers and the overall economy, it also contributes to land degradation. The scarcity of land compels livestock to rely heavily on overgrazed natural pastures for feed intake. This contributes to Ethiopia’s high rates of soil erosion and land degradation, thus posing a significant threat to ecosystems and livelihoods. With climate change projected to exacerbate this issue, there is an urgent call for action towards the implementation of innovative farming systems that simultaneously increase yields, safeguard natural resources, and foster economic growth. Consequently, the EthiopiaGrass project aims to develop integrated grassland-cropping systems that address this challenge through testing of multipurpose forages and grass-legume mixes for enhancing livestock feed provision, increasing food crop production, and simultaneously improving soil quality. During on-station trials in North and Southern Ethiopia, several grass-legume mixtures were identified as more productive than monocultures and having positive effects on soil quality, carbon storage, and nutrient cycling. Participatory farmer-led testing amongst more than 300 farmers confirmed their acceptability by smallholders and revealed specific trait preferences and adoption patterns. This paper presents a quantitative assessment of the environmental benefits of widespread adoption of such grass-legume mixes in Ethiopia's mixed crop-livestock and specialized dairy systems. We parametrized the CLEANED model (https://alliancebioversityciat.org/tools-innovations/cleaned) with secondary data on livestock numbers, herd composition, and productivity, along with empirical data from trials, adoption rates from participatory assessments and feed basket compositions from G-FEAST assessments (https://www.ilri.org/news/gendered-feed-assessment-tool-g-feast). The results demonstrate significant environmental benefits of forage grass-legume mixes, including a nearly 20% reduction in land requirement per liter of milk, up to 15% decline in nitrogen mining and water use, and almost 20% reduction in GHG emission intensity. This presents opportunities to reduce livestock numbers, freeing up land for food or cash crops, reforestation, or conservation efforts. To achieve sustainable farming in Ethiopia, substantial changes in livestock and land management are imperative. Transitioning to more intensive feeding systems such as cut-and-carry forage production of integrated grass-legume mixes or improved forage rotations with food crops could be crucial. However, further research is needed to assess gendered labour and decision-making implications.
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spelling CGSpace1555572025-11-05T11:13:44Z Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia Notenbaert, An Girmay, Eyuel Mwema, Emmanuel Bekele, Regassa Mwendia, Solomon Mulatu, Kalkidan livestock climate change cambio climático impacto ambiental ganadería environmental impact assessment-environmental assessment land degradation soil quality-soil health calidad del suelo degradación de tierras While livestock plays a crucial role in the livelihoods of Ethiopian farmers and the overall economy, it also contributes to land degradation. The scarcity of land compels livestock to rely heavily on overgrazed natural pastures for feed intake. This contributes to Ethiopia’s high rates of soil erosion and land degradation, thus posing a significant threat to ecosystems and livelihoods. With climate change projected to exacerbate this issue, there is an urgent call for action towards the implementation of innovative farming systems that simultaneously increase yields, safeguard natural resources, and foster economic growth. Consequently, the EthiopiaGrass project aims to develop integrated grassland-cropping systems that address this challenge through testing of multipurpose forages and grass-legume mixes for enhancing livestock feed provision, increasing food crop production, and simultaneously improving soil quality. During on-station trials in North and Southern Ethiopia, several grass-legume mixtures were identified as more productive than monocultures and having positive effects on soil quality, carbon storage, and nutrient cycling. Participatory farmer-led testing amongst more than 300 farmers confirmed their acceptability by smallholders and revealed specific trait preferences and adoption patterns. This paper presents a quantitative assessment of the environmental benefits of widespread adoption of such grass-legume mixes in Ethiopia's mixed crop-livestock and specialized dairy systems. We parametrized the CLEANED model (https://alliancebioversityciat.org/tools-innovations/cleaned) with secondary data on livestock numbers, herd composition, and productivity, along with empirical data from trials, adoption rates from participatory assessments and feed basket compositions from G-FEAST assessments (https://www.ilri.org/news/gendered-feed-assessment-tool-g-feast). The results demonstrate significant environmental benefits of forage grass-legume mixes, including a nearly 20% reduction in land requirement per liter of milk, up to 15% decline in nitrogen mining and water use, and almost 20% reduction in GHG emission intensity. This presents opportunities to reduce livestock numbers, freeing up land for food or cash crops, reforestation, or conservation efforts. To achieve sustainable farming in Ethiopia, substantial changes in livestock and land management are imperative. Transitioning to more intensive feeding systems such as cut-and-carry forage production of integrated grass-legume mixes or improved forage rotations with food crops could be crucial. However, further research is needed to assess gendered labour and decision-making implications. 2024-09-12 2024-10-24T10:51:19Z 2024-10-24T10:51:19Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155557 en Open Access application/pdf Notenbaert, A.; Girmay, E.; Mwema, E.; Bekele, R.; Mwendia, S.; Mulatu, K. (2024) Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia. Presented at Tropentag: Explore opportunities... for managing natural resources and a better life for all, on 11-13 September 2024 in Vienna (Austria). 14 sl.
spellingShingle livestock
climate change
cambio climático
impacto ambiental
ganadería
environmental impact assessment-environmental assessment
land degradation
soil quality-soil health
calidad del suelo
degradación de tierras
Notenbaert, An
Girmay, Eyuel
Mwema, Emmanuel
Bekele, Regassa
Mwendia, Solomon
Mulatu, Kalkidan
Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title_full Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title_short Evaluating the potential environmental co-benefits of perennial grass-legume mixtures in Ethiopia
title_sort evaluating the potential environmental co benefits of perennial grass legume mixtures in ethiopia
topic livestock
climate change
cambio climático
impacto ambiental
ganadería
environmental impact assessment-environmental assessment
land degradation
soil quality-soil health
calidad del suelo
degradación de tierras
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/155557
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