Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS

Bure district has a diverse ago-ecology, different soil types, a relatively long rainy season and a number of rivers and streams for irrigation. Therefore, it has suitable tract of land to grow temperate, subtropical and tropical fruit crops. In 2007, fruits were identified as a potential marketable...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dessalegn, Yigsaw, Berhe, Kahsay, Hoekstra, Dirk, Mehari, Y., Derso, T.
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2907
_version_ 1855517219981623296
author Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Berhe, Kahsay
Hoekstra, Dirk
Mehari, Y.
Derso, T.
author_browse Berhe, Kahsay
Derso, T.
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Hoekstra, Dirk
Mehari, Y.
author_facet Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Berhe, Kahsay
Hoekstra, Dirk
Mehari, Y.
Derso, T.
author_sort Dessalegn, Yigsaw
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Bure district has a diverse ago-ecology, different soil types, a relatively long rainy season and a number of rivers and streams for irrigation. Therefore, it has suitable tract of land to grow temperate, subtropical and tropical fruit crops. In 2007, fruits were identified as a potential marketable commodity by the stakeholders participating in the IPMS project. They diagnosed that farmers had limited orchard management knowledge and skill and were growing locally available less productive and low quality fruit varieties. In addition, the linkage among fruit production stakeholders was very weak. Moreover, fruit seedlings from local seeds were only multiplied and distributed from the government fruit nursery and the supply was inadequate. Therefore, the quantity and quality of fruit produced in the district was still very low. The stakeholders also identified possible interventions along the value chain and subsequently intervened in capacity building (orchard management and propagation techniques), improved varieties introduction, input supply (established private nurseries, introduced grafting in government nurseries), stakeholders linkage and marketing of outputs. Thirteen (13) private fruit nurseries were established in four Peasant Associations (PAs) and in Bure town, which produced 68% of the seedlings in the district in 2008. Poor women and landless youth were also able to participate. The skill and knowledge of farmers, Development Agents (DAs) and experts improved through training and study tours which created linkages with new knowledge and capacity development actors. However, shortage of scion to multiply grafted fruit planting materials hampered mango and avocado expansion. i.e. only 3% of the mango and avocado seedlings in 2008 were grafted. Project partners are however addressing the issue by identifying alternative scion supply for avocado. Presently, 35% and 93% of the avocado seedlings raised for July 2010 planting, in the government and private nurseries, respectively, are grafted.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace2907
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2010
publishDateRange 2010
publishDateSort 2010
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace29072023-03-13T14:13:18Z Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS Dessalegn, Yigsaw Berhe, Kahsay Hoekstra, Dirk Mehari, Y. Derso, T. innovation adoption fruits Bure district has a diverse ago-ecology, different soil types, a relatively long rainy season and a number of rivers and streams for irrigation. Therefore, it has suitable tract of land to grow temperate, subtropical and tropical fruit crops. In 2007, fruits were identified as a potential marketable commodity by the stakeholders participating in the IPMS project. They diagnosed that farmers had limited orchard management knowledge and skill and were growing locally available less productive and low quality fruit varieties. In addition, the linkage among fruit production stakeholders was very weak. Moreover, fruit seedlings from local seeds were only multiplied and distributed from the government fruit nursery and the supply was inadequate. Therefore, the quantity and quality of fruit produced in the district was still very low. The stakeholders also identified possible interventions along the value chain and subsequently intervened in capacity building (orchard management and propagation techniques), improved varieties introduction, input supply (established private nurseries, introduced grafting in government nurseries), stakeholders linkage and marketing of outputs. Thirteen (13) private fruit nurseries were established in four Peasant Associations (PAs) and in Bure town, which produced 68% of the seedlings in the district in 2008. Poor women and landless youth were also able to participate. The skill and knowledge of farmers, Development Agents (DAs) and experts improved through training and study tours which created linkages with new knowledge and capacity development actors. However, shortage of scion to multiply grafted fruit planting materials hampered mango and avocado expansion. i.e. only 3% of the mango and avocado seedlings in 2008 were grafted. Project partners are however addressing the issue by identifying alternative scion supply for avocado. Presently, 35% and 93% of the avocado seedlings raised for July 2010 planting, in the government and private nurseries, respectively, are grafted. 2010-12-15 2010-12-09T19:00:50Z 2010-12-09T19:00:50Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2907 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Dessalegn, Y., Berhe, K., Hoekstra, D., Mehari, Y. and Derso, T. 2010. Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS. Nairobi (Kenya): ILRI.
spellingShingle innovation adoption
fruits
Dessalegn, Yigsaw
Berhe, Kahsay
Hoekstra, Dirk
Mehari, Y.
Derso, T.
Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title_full Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title_fullStr Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title_full_unstemmed Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title_short Smallholder fruit development in Bure District, Ethiopia: Experiences from IPMS
title_sort smallholder fruit development in bure district ethiopia experiences from ipms
topic innovation adoption
fruits
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/2907
work_keys_str_mv AT dessalegnyigsaw smallholderfruitdevelopmentinburedistrictethiopiaexperiencesfromipms
AT berhekahsay smallholderfruitdevelopmentinburedistrictethiopiaexperiencesfromipms
AT hoekstradirk smallholderfruitdevelopmentinburedistrictethiopiaexperiencesfromipms
AT mehariy smallholderfruitdevelopmentinburedistrictethiopiaexperiencesfromipms
AT dersot smallholderfruitdevelopmentinburedistrictethiopiaexperiencesfromipms