Understanding agroecological domains: The key to a successful participatory plant breeding program
Farmers have an intricate knowledge of their agro ecological domains. The empirical evidences from Kachorwa (terai) and Begans (mid-hill) sites in Nepal suggest that farmers distinguish domains for rice primarily on the basis of moisture and fertility. Farmers also differentiate the number, relative...
| Main Authors: | , , , , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Book Chapter |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
CGIAR Systemwide Program on Participatory Research and Gender Analysis for Technology Development and Institutional Innovation
2001
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/81887 |
Similar Items: Understanding agroecological domains: The key to a successful participatory plant breeding program
- Towards an understanding of the ecological processes behind the success of the Quesungual alash and mulch agroforestry system (QSMAS) in western Honduras
- Key to ecological processes in Ucayali
- Grass-shrub coexistence: understanding root distribution in ecological sites of the Semiarid Chaco, Argentina
- Indicadores biofisicos de la Estructura Agroecological Principal (EAP) para el co-deseno de SAF cacao en dos zonas productora de Tumaco (Narino)
- Success from the ground up: Participatory monitoring and forest restoration
- Comment on “Worldwide evidence of a unimodal relationship between productivity and plant species richness”