Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands

Sustainability of their agricultural systems is essential for many tropical countries where the majority of the people depend upon agriculture for their livelihoods. In the short term economic sustainability is the main factor influencing viability of an agricultural system and of the farms which fo...

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Main Authors: Utiger, C., Romney, Dannie L., Njoroge, L., Staal, Steven J., Lukuyu, Ben A., Chege, L.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1927
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author Utiger, C.
Romney, Dannie L.
Njoroge, L.
Staal, Steven J.
Lukuyu, Ben A.
Chege, L.
author_browse Chege, L.
Lukuyu, Ben A.
Njoroge, L.
Romney, Dannie L.
Staal, Steven J.
Utiger, C.
author_facet Utiger, C.
Romney, Dannie L.
Njoroge, L.
Staal, Steven J.
Lukuyu, Ben A.
Chege, L.
author_sort Utiger, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sustainability of their agricultural systems is essential for many tropical countries where the majority of the people depend upon agriculture for their livelihoods. In the short term economic sustainability is the main factor influencing viability of an agricultural system and of the farms which form its production units. In the long-term, however, economic viability will depend upon the nutrient status of a system. In common with much of the eastern African highlands, Kiambu district in central Kenya has high and increasing pressure on its land and farmers are responding by steadily intensifying their farming systems. This paper addresses the hypothesis that where ruminant livestock are present in intensifying smallholder cropping systems, they make a positive contribution to the nutrient status of the smallholder system. For 21 crop-dairy farms representative of the major smallholder-farming systems in the central highlands of Kenya, annual nutrient balances were determined in a longitudinal study. The farms were visited twice a week; data on all farm inputs and outputs were collected, based on farmer recall. Measures of livestock feed inputs were collected fortnightly. Estimates of nutrient gains and losses in the soil resulting from erosion, leaching, denitrification, volatilisation and N fixation were taken from the literature. Using these data, annual nutrient balances per hectare were estimated for N, P and K. The majority of the sample farms had balanced nutrient flows or were in positive balance for N, P and K overall because of positive flows to the dairy sub-unit, which counterbalanced the outflows from the crop sub-unit. The dairy unit contributed significantly, principally through feed purchases, particularly concentrates for lactating cows. Napier grass and crop residues were also purchased, and large quantities of roadside grass were collected from outside the farms. On the majority of the farms the nutrients returned to the cropping land as manure (which consisted of faeces, bedding material and feed refusals) contributed more nutrients than inorganic fertilisers. It is concluded that the dairy cattle played a major role in contributing nutrient in-flows into these intensive smallholder farms, as well as providing the household’s regular source of income through milk sales.
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spelling CGSpace19272025-11-04T16:25:09Z Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands Utiger, C. Romney, Dannie L. Njoroge, L. Staal, Steven J. Lukuyu, Ben A. Chege, L. dairy industry crops mixed farming nutrients Sustainability of their agricultural systems is essential for many tropical countries where the majority of the people depend upon agriculture for their livelihoods. In the short term economic sustainability is the main factor influencing viability of an agricultural system and of the farms which form its production units. In the long-term, however, economic viability will depend upon the nutrient status of a system. In common with much of the eastern African highlands, Kiambu district in central Kenya has high and increasing pressure on its land and farmers are responding by steadily intensifying their farming systems. This paper addresses the hypothesis that where ruminant livestock are present in intensifying smallholder cropping systems, they make a positive contribution to the nutrient status of the smallholder system. For 21 crop-dairy farms representative of the major smallholder-farming systems in the central highlands of Kenya, annual nutrient balances were determined in a longitudinal study. The farms were visited twice a week; data on all farm inputs and outputs were collected, based on farmer recall. Measures of livestock feed inputs were collected fortnightly. Estimates of nutrient gains and losses in the soil resulting from erosion, leaching, denitrification, volatilisation and N fixation were taken from the literature. Using these data, annual nutrient balances per hectare were estimated for N, P and K. The majority of the sample farms had balanced nutrient flows or were in positive balance for N, P and K overall because of positive flows to the dairy sub-unit, which counterbalanced the outflows from the crop sub-unit. The dairy unit contributed significantly, principally through feed purchases, particularly concentrates for lactating cows. Napier grass and crop residues were also purchased, and large quantities of roadside grass were collected from outside the farms. On the majority of the farms the nutrients returned to the cropping land as manure (which consisted of faeces, bedding material and feed refusals) contributed more nutrients than inorganic fertilisers. It is concluded that the dairy cattle played a major role in contributing nutrient in-flows into these intensive smallholder farms, as well as providing the household’s regular source of income through milk sales. 2000-11-06 2010-06-14T11:46:37Z 2010-06-14T11:46:37Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1927 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Utiger, C.; Romney, D.; Njoroge, L.; Staal, S.; Lukuyu, B.; Chege, L. 2000. Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands. Paper presented at the 3rd All Africa Conference on Animal Agriculture and 11th Conference of the Egyptian Society of Animal Production, 6-9 November 2000, Alexandria, Egypt. Nairobi (Kenya): ILRI
spellingShingle dairy industry
crops
mixed farming
nutrients
Utiger, C.
Romney, Dannie L.
Njoroge, L.
Staal, Steven J.
Lukuyu, Ben A.
Chege, L.
Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title_full Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title_fullStr Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title_full_unstemmed Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title_short Nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop-dairy production systems in the Kenya highlands
title_sort nutrient flows and balances in intensive crop dairy production systems in the kenya highlands
topic dairy industry
crops
mixed farming
nutrients
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1927
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AT staalstevenj nutrientflowsandbalancesinintensivecropdairyproductionsystemsinthekenyahighlands
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