Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia

Farmers' insights are crucial for widespread adoption of new agricultural technologies. This study employed the Tricot approach, where farmers directly compared three sets of technologies under real-field conditions. The method, popular for food crops in small-scale farming, was adapted for forages...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mulatu, Kalkidan, De Sousa, Kaue, Ebrahim, Mohammed, Notenbaert, An, Abera, Wuletawu, Mwendia, Solomon, Girma, Eyuel, Jørgensen, Marit
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163542
_version_ 1855514164488830976
author Mulatu, Kalkidan
De Sousa, Kaue
Ebrahim, Mohammed
Notenbaert, An
Abera, Wuletawu
Mwendia, Solomon
Girma, Eyuel
Jørgensen, Marit
author_browse Abera, Wuletawu
De Sousa, Kaue
Ebrahim, Mohammed
Girma, Eyuel
Jørgensen, Marit
Mulatu, Kalkidan
Mwendia, Solomon
Notenbaert, An
author_facet Mulatu, Kalkidan
De Sousa, Kaue
Ebrahim, Mohammed
Notenbaert, An
Abera, Wuletawu
Mwendia, Solomon
Girma, Eyuel
Jørgensen, Marit
author_sort Mulatu, Kalkidan
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Farmers' insights are crucial for widespread adoption of new agricultural technologies. This study employed the Tricot approach, where farmers directly compared three sets of technologies under real-field conditions. The method, popular for food crops in small-scale farming, was adapted for forages in Ethiopia. Across two regions with contrasting mid-altitude environments (Amhara and Sidama), we engaged 600 farmers in two cycles. The goal: identify a forage mixture offering both livestock feed and land restoration benefits. Fourteen treatments were evaluated, including monoculture grass and legume varieties, as well as their mixtures. Through randomisation, each farmer received three treatments. District agricultural officers were trained on managing each forage species (land preparation, weeding, harvesting) and using digital data collection tools. They then assisted farmers throughout the experiment. Farmers were encouraged to observe and record their experiences throughout the establishment and harvesting phases. This allowed them to rank the varieties based on traits and performance and identify their preferences from most favourite to least favourite within their assigned set of three. While preferences varied across regions, the overall favourite combination emerged as Panicum cv Mombasa, Brachiaria hybrid Cayman, Desmodium intortum, and Stylosanthes Hamata. Notably, soil cover and erosion reduction were key factors influencing this preference. The preference ranking likely reflects the most probable choices for adoption by livestock and forage producers in the study areas and potentially in similar environments. The scaling of multipurpose forages and their mixtures could be linked to land restoration efforts at different scales to ensure availability of land to produce forages, especially through area closures and rehabilitation of degraded range lands. Improving national forage seed registration systems would be critical to ensure the availability of planting materials.
format Ponencia
id CGSpace163542
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1635422025-11-05T11:52:39Z Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia Mulatu, Kalkidan De Sousa, Kaue Ebrahim, Mohammed Notenbaert, An Abera, Wuletawu Mwendia, Solomon Girma, Eyuel Jørgensen, Marit land degradation forage land restoration livestock feed citizen science Farmers' insights are crucial for widespread adoption of new agricultural technologies. This study employed the Tricot approach, where farmers directly compared three sets of technologies under real-field conditions. The method, popular for food crops in small-scale farming, was adapted for forages in Ethiopia. Across two regions with contrasting mid-altitude environments (Amhara and Sidama), we engaged 600 farmers in two cycles. The goal: identify a forage mixture offering both livestock feed and land restoration benefits. Fourteen treatments were evaluated, including monoculture grass and legume varieties, as well as their mixtures. Through randomisation, each farmer received three treatments. District agricultural officers were trained on managing each forage species (land preparation, weeding, harvesting) and using digital data collection tools. They then assisted farmers throughout the experiment. Farmers were encouraged to observe and record their experiences throughout the establishment and harvesting phases. This allowed them to rank the varieties based on traits and performance and identify their preferences from most favourite to least favourite within their assigned set of three. While preferences varied across regions, the overall favourite combination emerged as Panicum cv Mombasa, Brachiaria hybrid Cayman, Desmodium intortum, and Stylosanthes Hamata. Notably, soil cover and erosion reduction were key factors influencing this preference. The preference ranking likely reflects the most probable choices for adoption by livestock and forage producers in the study areas and potentially in similar environments. The scaling of multipurpose forages and their mixtures could be linked to land restoration efforts at different scales to ensure availability of land to produce forages, especially through area closures and rehabilitation of degraded range lands. Improving national forage seed registration systems would be critical to ensure the availability of planting materials. 2024-09-12 2024-12-16T11:37:52Z 2024-12-16T11:37:52Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163542 en Open Access application/pdf Mulatu, K.; De Sousa, K.; Ebrahim, M.; Notenbaert, A.; Abera, W.; Mwendia, S.; Girma, E.; Jørgensen, M. (2024) Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia. Presented for Tropentag conference on 12 September 2024. 14 sl.
spellingShingle land degradation
forage
land restoration
livestock feed
citizen science
Mulatu, Kalkidan
De Sousa, Kaue
Ebrahim, Mohammed
Notenbaert, An
Abera, Wuletawu
Mwendia, Solomon
Girma, Eyuel
Jørgensen, Marit
Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title_full Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title_short Unlocking farmer-preferred multipurpose forage mixtures: A tricot approach in Ethiopia
title_sort unlocking farmer preferred multipurpose forage mixtures a tricot approach in ethiopia
topic land degradation
forage
land restoration
livestock feed
citizen science
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163542
work_keys_str_mv AT mulatukalkidan unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT desousakaue unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT ebrahimmohammed unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT notenbaertan unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT aberawuletawu unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT mwendiasolomon unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT girmaeyuel unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia
AT jørgensenmarit unlockingfarmerpreferredmultipurposeforagemixturesatricotapproachinethiopia