From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras

This study characterized agricultural mechanization and identified the main challenges and opportunities for maize, bean and coffee production systems across five departments in Honduras: Lempira, Copán, Intibucá, Olancho and El Paraíso. A total of 112 surveys were conducted, and four focus groups w...

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Main Authors: Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú, Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy, Vásquez, Emil, Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio, Leal González, Abel Jaime, McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse, Sanders, Arie, Odjo, Sylvanus, Van Loon, Jelle
Format: Preprint
Language:Inglés
Published: CABI 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180544
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author Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú
Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy
Vásquez, Emil
Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio
Leal González, Abel Jaime
McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse
Sanders, Arie
Odjo, Sylvanus
Van Loon, Jelle
author_browse Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy
Leal González, Abel Jaime
Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio
McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse
Odjo, Sylvanus
Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú
Sanders, Arie
Van Loon, Jelle
Vásquez, Emil
author_facet Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú
Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy
Vásquez, Emil
Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio
Leal González, Abel Jaime
McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse
Sanders, Arie
Odjo, Sylvanus
Van Loon, Jelle
author_sort Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study characterized agricultural mechanization and identified the main challenges and opportunities for maize, bean and coffee production systems across five departments in Honduras: Lempira, Copán, Intibucá, Olancho and El Paraíso. A total of 112 surveys were conducted, and four focus groups were held among farmers. The surveys gathered information on production systems and types of tools used, while focus groups explored perceptions of farmers about the challenges and mechanization needs. The farmers surveyed grow maize (95.5%), bean (92.9%), and coffee (38.4%), on areas smaller than 1 ha for maize and bean (73%) and from 1 to 5 ha for coffee (51.2%), located on hillsides, plains, and mixed terrain. The use of motorized tools varied greatly between sites and crops (0-65.1%), while the use of hand tools was reported by almost all respondents (90.7 95.2%). Overall, the tools present in all sites and crops were found to be manual, such as machetes (almost 100%) and hoes (50-100%), planting sticks for corn and bean (65%), and post hole diggers for coffee (81.4%). Lowest levels of mechanization occurred in harvesting and post-harvesting, although some machinery for post-harvest coffee processing was present. In western departments, maize shelling and bean threshing are mainly performed manually (up to 90.9%), while in eastern departments a higher usage of mechanical threshers/shellers was observed (up to 85%). The major challenges for production systems reported are the labor shortage, high equipment costs, lack of financing mechanisms, and the need for mechanization solutions adapted to local conditions. The findings suggest that an efficient transformation of production systems in these regions demands scale-appropriate mechanized solutions, paired with strategies that enable a transition from entirely manual tools to small equipment that reduces physical effort of farmers.
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spelling CGSpace1805442026-01-24T02:13:24Z From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy Vásquez, Emil Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio Leal González, Abel Jaime McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse Sanders, Arie Odjo, Sylvanus Van Loon, Jelle mechanization smallholders gender inclusion This study characterized agricultural mechanization and identified the main challenges and opportunities for maize, bean and coffee production systems across five departments in Honduras: Lempira, Copán, Intibucá, Olancho and El Paraíso. A total of 112 surveys were conducted, and four focus groups were held among farmers. The surveys gathered information on production systems and types of tools used, while focus groups explored perceptions of farmers about the challenges and mechanization needs. The farmers surveyed grow maize (95.5%), bean (92.9%), and coffee (38.4%), on areas smaller than 1 ha for maize and bean (73%) and from 1 to 5 ha for coffee (51.2%), located on hillsides, plains, and mixed terrain. The use of motorized tools varied greatly between sites and crops (0-65.1%), while the use of hand tools was reported by almost all respondents (90.7 95.2%). Overall, the tools present in all sites and crops were found to be manual, such as machetes (almost 100%) and hoes (50-100%), planting sticks for corn and bean (65%), and post hole diggers for coffee (81.4%). Lowest levels of mechanization occurred in harvesting and post-harvesting, although some machinery for post-harvest coffee processing was present. In western departments, maize shelling and bean threshing are mainly performed manually (up to 90.9%), while in eastern departments a higher usage of mechanical threshers/shellers was observed (up to 85%). The major challenges for production systems reported are the labor shortage, high equipment costs, lack of financing mechanisms, and the need for mechanization solutions adapted to local conditions. The findings suggest that an efficient transformation of production systems in these regions demands scale-appropriate mechanized solutions, paired with strategies that enable a transition from entirely manual tools to small equipment that reduces physical effort of farmers. 2026-01-14 2026-01-23T15:56:59Z 2026-01-23T15:56:59Z Preprint https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180544 en Open Access application/pdf CABI Patiño-Espejel, J. E., Cabrera Meraz, J., Vásquez, E., Lopez Gomez, J. A., Leal González, A. J., McLean Rodriguez, F. D., Sanders, A., Odjo, S., & Van Loon, J. (2026). From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras. AgriRxiv. https://doi.org/10.31220/agriRxiv.2026.00394
spellingShingle mechanization
smallholders
gender
inclusion
Patiño-Espejel, Joshua Esaú
Cabrera Meraz, Jeimy
Vásquez, Emil
Lopez Gomez, Jesús Antonio
Leal González, Abel Jaime
McLean-Rodríguez, Francis Denisse
Sanders, Arie
Odjo, Sylvanus
Van Loon, Jelle
From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title_full From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title_fullStr From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title_full_unstemmed From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title_short From hand tools to mechanization: characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize, bean, and coffee smallholders in Honduras
title_sort from hand tools to mechanization characterizing gaps and opportunities for maize bean and coffee smallholders in honduras
topic mechanization
smallholders
gender
inclusion
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180544
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