Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa

This paper emphasizes adoption and impact studies as tools to assess the benefits of agricultural technologies, and to provide feedback for further technology development. The findings are reported of a study undertaken to describe the adoption and impact of Russian wheat aphid (RWA) resistant culti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marasas, Carissa N., Anandajayasekeram, P., Millard, S., Van Rooyen, C. J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170401
_version_ 1855539498207674368
author Marasas, Carissa N.
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Millard, S.
Van Rooyen, C. J.
author_browse Anandajayasekeram, P.
Marasas, Carissa N.
Millard, S.
Van Rooyen, C. J.
author_facet Marasas, Carissa N.
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Millard, S.
Van Rooyen, C. J.
author_sort Marasas, Carissa N.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper emphasizes adoption and impact studies as tools to assess the benefits of agricultural technologies, and to provide feedback for further technology development. The findings are reported of a study undertaken to describe the adoption and impact of Russian wheat aphid (RWA) resistant cultivars developed by the South African Agricultural Research Council. The analyses employed farm-level data from surveys conducted in 1997 in the Central and Eastern Free State of South Africa. Rapid adoption of the cultivars was demonstrated since their first release in 1993. The area sown to the cultivars increased from 3% in 1993 to 46% in 1997. Correlation and multiple regression analyses suggested that adoption of the cultivars was influenced by the farmer's educational level, wheat area, and experience with RWA; the quality grades realized by resistant cultivars; and the combined weighted average yield of resistant and susceptible cultivars. Economic analyses using partial budgets indicated that resistant cultivars generated incremental net benefits ranging between 140 and 329 Rands/ha in 1997 prices. The findings demonstrate that various factors apart from pest resistance also influenced the farmers' decisions to adopt RWA resistant cultivars, and underline the importance of farm-level data in agricultural research and extension.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace170401
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2005
publishDateRange 2005
publishDateSort 2005
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1704012025-02-19T14:08:08Z Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa Marasas, Carissa N. Anandajayasekeram, P. Millard, S. Van Rooyen, C. J. impact agricultural technology This paper emphasizes adoption and impact studies as tools to assess the benefits of agricultural technologies, and to provide feedback for further technology development. The findings are reported of a study undertaken to describe the adoption and impact of Russian wheat aphid (RWA) resistant cultivars developed by the South African Agricultural Research Council. The analyses employed farm-level data from surveys conducted in 1997 in the Central and Eastern Free State of South Africa. Rapid adoption of the cultivars was demonstrated since their first release in 1993. The area sown to the cultivars increased from 3% in 1993 to 46% in 1997. Correlation and multiple regression analyses suggested that adoption of the cultivars was influenced by the farmer's educational level, wheat area, and experience with RWA; the quality grades realized by resistant cultivars; and the combined weighted average yield of resistant and susceptible cultivars. Economic analyses using partial budgets indicated that resistant cultivars generated incremental net benefits ranging between 140 and 329 Rands/ha in 1997 prices. The findings demonstrate that various factors apart from pest resistance also influenced the farmers' decisions to adopt RWA resistant cultivars, and underline the importance of farm-level data in agricultural research and extension. 2005 2025-01-29T12:56:57Z 2025-01-29T12:56:57Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170401 en Limited Access Marasas, Carissa N.; Anandajayasekeram, P.; Millard, S.; Van Rooyen, C. J. 2005. Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa. South African Journal of Extension 34(2): 318-333. https://hdl.handle.net/10520/EJC18543
spellingShingle impact
agricultural technology
Marasas, Carissa N.
Anandajayasekeram, P.
Millard, S.
Van Rooyen, C. J.
Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title_full Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title_fullStr Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title_short Farm-level adoption and impact of agricultural technology: the case of Russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in South Africa
title_sort farm level adoption and impact of agricultural technology the case of russian wheat aphid resistant cultivars in south africa
topic impact
agricultural technology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/170401
work_keys_str_mv AT marasascarissan farmleveladoptionandimpactofagriculturaltechnologythecaseofrussianwheataphidresistantcultivarsinsouthafrica
AT anandajayasekeramp farmleveladoptionandimpactofagriculturaltechnologythecaseofrussianwheataphidresistantcultivarsinsouthafrica
AT millards farmleveladoptionandimpactofagriculturaltechnologythecaseofrussianwheataphidresistantcultivarsinsouthafrica
AT vanrooyencj farmleveladoptionandimpactofagriculturaltechnologythecaseofrussianwheataphidresistantcultivarsinsouthafrica