Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions

Ethiopian part of Nile is dominated by mixed crop–livestock rainfed agriculture. Agricultural productivity in the area is low due to: high temporal and spatial variation in climate, sever land degradation; lack of appropriate technologies; poor infrastructure & limited extension services, etc. Inter...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Erkossa, Teklu, Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Format: Poster
Language:Inglés
Published: IWMI/ILRI 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/188
_version_ 1855518871209902080
author Erkossa, Teklu
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
author_browse Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Erkossa, Teklu
author_facet Erkossa, Teklu
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
author_sort Erkossa, Teklu
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Ethiopian part of Nile is dominated by mixed crop–livestock rainfed agriculture. Agricultural productivity in the area is low due to: high temporal and spatial variation in climate, sever land degradation; lack of appropriate technologies; poor infrastructure & limited extension services, etc. Interventions for sustained & increased productivity and reverse the current state of land degradation are needed. This poster shows the result of study conducted to characterize the prevailing farming systems, identify suitable technologies and assess their possible impacts.
format Poster
id CGSpace188
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2009
publishDateRange 2009
publishDateSort 2009
publisher IWMI/ILRI
publisherStr IWMI/ILRI
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1882021-02-10T20:33:41Z Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions Erkossa, Teklu Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele livestock water Ethiopian part of Nile is dominated by mixed crop–livestock rainfed agriculture. Agricultural productivity in the area is low due to: high temporal and spatial variation in climate, sever land degradation; lack of appropriate technologies; poor infrastructure & limited extension services, etc. Interventions for sustained & increased productivity and reverse the current state of land degradation are needed. This poster shows the result of study conducted to characterize the prevailing farming systems, identify suitable technologies and assess their possible impacts. 2009-12-09 2009-12-16T06:25:05Z 2009-12-16T06:25:05Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/188 en IWMI/ILRI Erkossa, T.; Awulachew, S.B. 2009. Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions. Poster. Addis Ababa (Ethiopia): IWMI/Nairobi (Kenya): ILRI
spellingShingle livestock
water
Erkossa, Teklu
Awulachew, Seleshi Bekele
Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title_full Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title_fullStr Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title_short Agricultural productivity in Ethiopian Nile and interventions
title_sort agricultural productivity in ethiopian nile and interventions
topic livestock
water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/188
work_keys_str_mv AT erkossateklu agriculturalproductivityinethiopiannileandinterventions
AT awulachewseleshibekele agriculturalproductivityinethiopiannileandinterventions