Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis

Lushoto District is part of Tanzania’s most important milk production regions; depending on the village, 25-95% of households own improved dairy cows. However, land pressure is high and both income and food security are low. The aim of this study has been to assess the potential of various forage cu...

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Autor principal: Heemskerk, Stijn J.
Formato: Tesis
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wageningen University & Research 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77231
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author Heemskerk, Stijn J.
author_browse Heemskerk, Stijn J.
author_facet Heemskerk, Stijn J.
author_sort Heemskerk, Stijn J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Lushoto District is part of Tanzania’s most important milk production regions; depending on the village, 25-95% of households own improved dairy cows. However, land pressure is high and both income and food security are low. The aim of this study has been to assess the potential of various forage cultivation intensification strategies (‘scenarios’) to improve physical production and income of smallholder crop-dairy farmers in Lushoto district, Tanzania. Representative farms were created in the FarmDESIGN model with data from household surveys, feed analyses, milk measurements, soil samples and GPS measurements from 20 farms in Ubiri village. Two baseline farms were modeled, to account for the sample range in labor availability: 4 farm households were headed by a single (grand)parent; as such, available labor was about half the level of households with at least two members active on-farm full-time. The baseline farm without such labor-constraints (‘HL’ for ‘high labor’) owns two dairy cows, the baseline farm with limited labor (‘LL’) does not own cattle. A participatory scenario development workshop revealed the most promising intensification strategy: Napier cultivation on the plots close to the homesteads. Bio-economic performance under this scenario was modeled for each representative farm, the main management difference between HL and LL being that the latter does not collect natural grasses from public land in addition to Napier cultivation. The scenario shows potential for substantial improvement compared to the baseline: a tripling of milk production, a net cash income increase of 147%, and no reduction in household food production on the representative farm without labor constraints. This scenario seems promising for both farms, but it should be noted that [1] the farms would become structurally reliant on mineral fertilizers and imported maize bran, and [2] the LL farm runs a negative carbon balance because it does not import natural grasses, thereby threatening long-term soil fertility. Results needs to be validated by future research, but they show potential for improving livelihoods of smallholder dairy farmers in Lushoto.
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spelling CGSpace772312025-11-05T17:30:32Z Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis Heemskerk, Stijn J. milk production smallholders food production livelihoods soil fertility livestock crop management farm models producción lechera producción alimentaria medios de vida fertilidad del suelo ganado manejo del cultivo áfrica al sur del sahara Lushoto District is part of Tanzania’s most important milk production regions; depending on the village, 25-95% of households own improved dairy cows. However, land pressure is high and both income and food security are low. The aim of this study has been to assess the potential of various forage cultivation intensification strategies (‘scenarios’) to improve physical production and income of smallholder crop-dairy farmers in Lushoto district, Tanzania. Representative farms were created in the FarmDESIGN model with data from household surveys, feed analyses, milk measurements, soil samples and GPS measurements from 20 farms in Ubiri village. Two baseline farms were modeled, to account for the sample range in labor availability: 4 farm households were headed by a single (grand)parent; as such, available labor was about half the level of households with at least two members active on-farm full-time. The baseline farm without such labor-constraints (‘HL’ for ‘high labor’) owns two dairy cows, the baseline farm with limited labor (‘LL’) does not own cattle. A participatory scenario development workshop revealed the most promising intensification strategy: Napier cultivation on the plots close to the homesteads. Bio-economic performance under this scenario was modeled for each representative farm, the main management difference between HL and LL being that the latter does not collect natural grasses from public land in addition to Napier cultivation. The scenario shows potential for substantial improvement compared to the baseline: a tripling of milk production, a net cash income increase of 147%, and no reduction in household food production on the representative farm without labor constraints. This scenario seems promising for both farms, but it should be noted that [1] the farms would become structurally reliant on mineral fertilizers and imported maize bran, and [2] the LL farm runs a negative carbon balance because it does not import natural grasses, thereby threatening long-term soil fertility. Results needs to be validated by future research, but they show potential for improving livelihoods of smallholder dairy farmers in Lushoto. 2016 2016-10-11T18:26:35Z 2016-10-11T18:26:35Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77231 en Open Access application/pdf Wageningen University & Research Heemskerk, Stijn Jacob. 2016. Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis . Wageningen University. Farming Systems Ecology Group, Wageningen, NL. 34 p.
spellingShingle milk production
smallholders
food production
livelihoods
soil fertility
livestock
crop management
farm models
producción lechera
producción alimentaria
medios de vida
fertilidad del suelo
ganado
manejo del cultivo
áfrica al sur del sahara
Heemskerk, Stijn J.
Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title_full Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title_fullStr Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title_full_unstemmed Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title_short Bio-economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop-dairy systems in Lushoto District, Tanzania. Farming Systems Ecology Thesis
title_sort bio economic evaluation of forage cultivation scenarios in crop dairy systems in lushoto district tanzania farming systems ecology thesis
topic milk production
smallholders
food production
livelihoods
soil fertility
livestock
crop management
farm models
producción lechera
producción alimentaria
medios de vida
fertilidad del suelo
ganado
manejo del cultivo
áfrica al sur del sahara
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77231
work_keys_str_mv AT heemskerkstijnj bioeconomicevaluationofforagecultivationscenariosincropdairysystemsinlushotodistricttanzaniafarmingsystemsecologythesis