Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya

In Kenya, the CGIAR Agroecology Initiative (AE-I) has two agroecological living landscapes (ALLs), one in Kiambu County and a second in Makueni County. Work package 1 (WP1) of the AE-I entailed two key components: ALL establishment, and innovation co-design. In line with broader agroecology approach...

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Main Authors: Fuchs, Lisa E., Korir, Hezekiah, Bolo, Peter, Sakha, Michael, Gumo, Pius, Mbelwa, Machio, Kuria, Anne, Adoyo, Beatrice, Syano, Nicholas, Kiruthi, Esther, Baijukya, Frederick, Baudron, Frédéric
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169333
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author Fuchs, Lisa E.
Korir, Hezekiah
Bolo, Peter
Sakha, Michael
Gumo, Pius
Mbelwa, Machio
Kuria, Anne
Adoyo, Beatrice
Syano, Nicholas
Kiruthi, Esther
Baijukya, Frederick
Baudron, Frédéric
author_browse Adoyo, Beatrice
Baijukya, Frederick
Baudron, Frédéric
Bolo, Peter
Fuchs, Lisa E.
Gumo, Pius
Kiruthi, Esther
Korir, Hezekiah
Kuria, Anne
Mbelwa, Machio
Sakha, Michael
Syano, Nicholas
author_facet Fuchs, Lisa E.
Korir, Hezekiah
Bolo, Peter
Sakha, Michael
Gumo, Pius
Mbelwa, Machio
Kuria, Anne
Adoyo, Beatrice
Syano, Nicholas
Kiruthi, Esther
Baijukya, Frederick
Baudron, Frédéric
author_sort Fuchs, Lisa E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Kenya, the CGIAR Agroecology Initiative (AE-I) has two agroecological living landscapes (ALLs), one in Kiambu County and a second in Makueni County. Work package 1 (WP1) of the AE-I entailed two key components: ALL establishment, and innovation co-design. In line with broader agroecology approaches and ontologies, both were to be achieved through transdisciplinary co-design processes. This report provides an overview of the innovation co-design process, its results, the scientific performance of co-designed practices and related reflections. First, the report introduces the three-pronged co-design approach, which included a preparatory phase, a co-design phase, and a trial phase; and outlines the many different steps involved in the process. It then provides details of the specific practices co-designed across the three identified focus areas in which most attention was required: soil management, water management, and integrated pest management. The respective practices for the Kiambu ALL included the use of compost manure, mulch, and chili-based biopesticides, and farmyard manure, planted terraces, and neem-based biopesticides in Makueni. In the first cycle of trials, each of these practices was put under trial on 10 farmers’ fields. The experimental design included on 5x6 m controlled test trial plot, and a second 5x6 m “uncontrolled” control plot. While the inputs used (including seeds, seedlings, and treatments) were centrally provided, and kept constant, the trial participants used their conventional practice in the control plots. With a few exceptions, this conventional practice is largely organic in Kiambu, and followed permaculture principles in Makueni. Third, the agronomic assessment of two consecutive experimentation cycles (October 2023-March 2024; May 2024-September 2024) revealed generally positive performance of the co-designed practices. A preliminary contextual climate analysis showed that both areas received excessive rainfall in the second cycle, with more than twice the long-term average in April and May. Experienced flooding and water logging considerably influenced agricultural production during that cycle. Considering gross productivity, yields only significantly improved in the Makueni ALL, while differences in Kiambu ALL were not significant. In Makueni, only farmyard manure had a significant effect on maize yields, while all three practices significantly improved bean yields. Considering pest and disease pressure, pests were significantly lower for cabbages in the IPM trials in Kiambu, but not for compost or mulch. In Makueni, pests were significantly lower for both maize and beans in the IPM trial, as well as for beans in the manure trial. Despite experiencing difficulties related to planting timing, the climatic conditions, the quality of the inputs used, and market constraints, the participating farmers evaluated the practices and their participation in the trials very positively. In the last two sections, the report discussed adoption and scaling approaches, and broader reflections on successes and challenges with the co-design process, and recommends a continuation of highly methodical and structured transdisciplinary innovation co-design. This report complements the detailed co-design report prepared by the WP1 Kenya team in 2023 (Fuchs et al., 2023b).
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spelling CGSpace1693332025-11-05T12:09:28Z Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya Fuchs, Lisa E. Korir, Hezekiah Bolo, Peter Sakha, Michael Gumo, Pius Mbelwa, Machio Kuria, Anne Adoyo, Beatrice Syano, Nicholas Kiruthi, Esther Baijukya, Frederick Baudron, Frédéric agriculture agroecology performance assessment participatory approaches water management yields agronomy participatory action research soil quality-soil health integrated pest management biopesticides experimental design In Kenya, the CGIAR Agroecology Initiative (AE-I) has two agroecological living landscapes (ALLs), one in Kiambu County and a second in Makueni County. Work package 1 (WP1) of the AE-I entailed two key components: ALL establishment, and innovation co-design. In line with broader agroecology approaches and ontologies, both were to be achieved through transdisciplinary co-design processes. This report provides an overview of the innovation co-design process, its results, the scientific performance of co-designed practices and related reflections. First, the report introduces the three-pronged co-design approach, which included a preparatory phase, a co-design phase, and a trial phase; and outlines the many different steps involved in the process. It then provides details of the specific practices co-designed across the three identified focus areas in which most attention was required: soil management, water management, and integrated pest management. The respective practices for the Kiambu ALL included the use of compost manure, mulch, and chili-based biopesticides, and farmyard manure, planted terraces, and neem-based biopesticides in Makueni. In the first cycle of trials, each of these practices was put under trial on 10 farmers’ fields. The experimental design included on 5x6 m controlled test trial plot, and a second 5x6 m “uncontrolled” control plot. While the inputs used (including seeds, seedlings, and treatments) were centrally provided, and kept constant, the trial participants used their conventional practice in the control plots. With a few exceptions, this conventional practice is largely organic in Kiambu, and followed permaculture principles in Makueni. Third, the agronomic assessment of two consecutive experimentation cycles (October 2023-March 2024; May 2024-September 2024) revealed generally positive performance of the co-designed practices. A preliminary contextual climate analysis showed that both areas received excessive rainfall in the second cycle, with more than twice the long-term average in April and May. Experienced flooding and water logging considerably influenced agricultural production during that cycle. Considering gross productivity, yields only significantly improved in the Makueni ALL, while differences in Kiambu ALL were not significant. In Makueni, only farmyard manure had a significant effect on maize yields, while all three practices significantly improved bean yields. Considering pest and disease pressure, pests were significantly lower for cabbages in the IPM trials in Kiambu, but not for compost or mulch. In Makueni, pests were significantly lower for both maize and beans in the IPM trial, as well as for beans in the manure trial. Despite experiencing difficulties related to planting timing, the climatic conditions, the quality of the inputs used, and market constraints, the participating farmers evaluated the practices and their participation in the trials very positively. In the last two sections, the report discussed adoption and scaling approaches, and broader reflections on successes and challenges with the co-design process, and recommends a continuation of highly methodical and structured transdisciplinary innovation co-design. This report complements the detailed co-design report prepared by the WP1 Kenya team in 2023 (Fuchs et al., 2023b). 2024-12-20 2025-01-17T14:12:41Z 2025-01-17T14:12:41Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169333 en Open Access application/pdf Fuchs, L.E.; Korir, H.; Bolo, P.; Sakha, M.; Gumo, P.; Mbelwa, M.; Kuria, A.; Adoyo, B.; Syano, N.; Kiruthi, E.; Baijukya, F.; Baudron, F. (2024) Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya. 50 p.
spellingShingle agriculture
agroecology
performance assessment
participatory approaches
water management
yields
agronomy
participatory action research
soil quality-soil health
integrated pest management
biopesticides
experimental design
Fuchs, Lisa E.
Korir, Hezekiah
Bolo, Peter
Sakha, Michael
Gumo, Pius
Mbelwa, Machio
Kuria, Anne
Adoyo, Beatrice
Syano, Nicholas
Kiruthi, Esther
Baijukya, Frederick
Baudron, Frédéric
Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title_full Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title_fullStr Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title_short Synthesis report on the co-design of agroecological innovations in the Agroecological Living Landscapes (ALLs) in Kenya
title_sort synthesis report on the co design of agroecological innovations in the agroecological living landscapes alls in kenya
topic agriculture
agroecology
performance assessment
participatory approaches
water management
yields
agronomy
participatory action research
soil quality-soil health
integrated pest management
biopesticides
experimental design
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/169333
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