Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya

Declining soil fertility is a major cause of low per capita food production on smallholder farms of sub-Saharan Africa. This study attempted to provide an empirical explanation of the factors associated with farmers’ decisions to adopt or not to adopt newly introduced integrated soil fertility manag...

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Main Authors: Mugwe, J, Mugendi, DN, Mucheru-Muna, M., Merckx, Roel, Chianu, Jonas N., Vanlauwe, Bernard
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Cambridge University Press 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43326
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author Mugwe, J
Mugendi, DN
Mucheru-Muna, M.
Merckx, Roel
Chianu, Jonas N.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_browse Chianu, Jonas N.
Merckx, Roel
Mucheru-Muna, M.
Mugendi, DN
Mugwe, J
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_facet Mugwe, J
Mugendi, DN
Mucheru-Muna, M.
Merckx, Roel
Chianu, Jonas N.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
author_sort Mugwe, J
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Declining soil fertility is a major cause of low per capita food production on smallholder farms of sub-Saharan Africa. This study attempted to provide an empirical explanation of the factors associated with farmers’ decisions to adopt or not to adopt newly introduced integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) technologies consisting of combinations of organics and mineral fertilizer in Meru South district of the central highlands of Kenya. Out of 106 households interviewed, 46% were ‘adopters’ while 54% were ‘non-adopters’. A logistic regression model showed that the factors that significantly influenced adoption positively were farm management, ability to hire labour and months in a year households bought food for their families, while age of household head and number of mature cattle negatively influenced adoption. The implication of these results is that the adoption of ISFM practices could be enhanced through targeting of younger families where both spouses work on the farm full-time and food insecure households. It is also important to target farmers that lack access to other sources of soil fertility improvement. Examples include farmers that do not own cattle or those owning few and who, therefore, have limited access to animal manure.
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language Inglés
publishDate 2009
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spelling CGSpace433262024-11-15T08:52:25Z Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya Mugwe, J Mugendi, DN Mucheru-Muna, M. Merckx, Roel Chianu, Jonas N. Vanlauwe, Bernard soil fertility highlands farmers organic fertilizers fertilidad del suelo zona de montaña agricultores abonos orgánicos Declining soil fertility is a major cause of low per capita food production on smallholder farms of sub-Saharan Africa. This study attempted to provide an empirical explanation of the factors associated with farmers’ decisions to adopt or not to adopt newly introduced integrated soil fertility management (ISFM) technologies consisting of combinations of organics and mineral fertilizer in Meru South district of the central highlands of Kenya. Out of 106 households interviewed, 46% were ‘adopters’ while 54% were ‘non-adopters’. A logistic regression model showed that the factors that significantly influenced adoption positively were farm management, ability to hire labour and months in a year households bought food for their families, while age of household head and number of mature cattle negatively influenced adoption. The implication of these results is that the adoption of ISFM practices could be enhanced through targeting of younger families where both spouses work on the farm full-time and food insecure households. It is also important to target farmers that lack access to other sources of soil fertility improvement. Examples include farmers that do not own cattle or those owning few and who, therefore, have limited access to animal manure. 2009-01 2014-09-24T08:41:58Z 2014-09-24T08:41:58Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43326 en Limited Access Cambridge University Press
spellingShingle soil fertility
highlands
farmers
organic fertilizers
fertilidad del suelo
zona de montaña
agricultores
abonos orgánicos
Mugwe, J
Mugendi, DN
Mucheru-Muna, M.
Merckx, Roel
Chianu, Jonas N.
Vanlauwe, Bernard
Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title_full Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title_fullStr Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title_short Determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of Kenya
title_sort determinants of the decision to adopt integrated soil fertility management practices by smallholder farmers in the central highlands of kenya
topic soil fertility
highlands
farmers
organic fertilizers
fertilidad del suelo
zona de montaña
agricultores
abonos orgánicos
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43326
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