Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security

Achieving sustainable food security in Nigeria is feasible through organic farming. However, unavailability and resource constraints hamper the adoption of agricultural inputs; hence the market offers opportunity for use of purchased organic inputs. In assessing the importance of the market, the stu...

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Main Authors: Olayide, O., Alene, A., Ikpi, A., Nziguheba, Generose
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90194
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author Olayide, O.
Alene, A.
Ikpi, A.
Nziguheba, Generose
author_browse Alene, A.
Ikpi, A.
Nziguheba, Generose
Olayide, O.
author_facet Olayide, O.
Alene, A.
Ikpi, A.
Nziguheba, Generose
author_sort Olayide, O.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Achieving sustainable food security in Nigeria is feasible through organic farming. However, unavailability and resource constraints hamper the adoption of agricultural inputs; hence the market offers opportunity for use of purchased organic inputs. In assessing the importance of the market, the study developed and employed a socio-economic-ecological-modeling (SEEM) framework in its analyses. Using data from a sample of 320 farm households and manure agents, the study aimed at bridging the knowledge gap on the importance, nature, structure and performance of manure market in northern Nigeria. Results show that cereal-legume-based cropping systems accounted for major use of total manure applied on the farm; maize-based cropping systems received the highest amount of the total manure applied. There was asymmetric information flow in the manure market. The market concentration ratios show that none of the manure agents was sufficient in exercising monopoly power in the manure market. The Gini coefficients of the Lorenz curve analyses further showed considerable degrees of inequalities in the volume of manure marketed by different agents both across the agro-ecological zones and socio-economic domains. Manure marketing was found to be inefficient. Further, manure marketing in the study area is profitable with huge potentials for market development.
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spelling CGSpace901942023-06-13T05:57:31Z Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security Olayide, O. Alene, A. Ikpi, A. Nziguheba, Generose manure marketing socio-economic-ecological-modeling self-sufficiency out-sourcing geographic information system savanna Achieving sustainable food security in Nigeria is feasible through organic farming. However, unavailability and resource constraints hamper the adoption of agricultural inputs; hence the market offers opportunity for use of purchased organic inputs. In assessing the importance of the market, the study developed and employed a socio-economic-ecological-modeling (SEEM) framework in its analyses. Using data from a sample of 320 farm households and manure agents, the study aimed at bridging the knowledge gap on the importance, nature, structure and performance of manure market in northern Nigeria. Results show that cereal-legume-based cropping systems accounted for major use of total manure applied on the farm; maize-based cropping systems received the highest amount of the total manure applied. There was asymmetric information flow in the manure market. The market concentration ratios show that none of the manure agents was sufficient in exercising monopoly power in the manure market. The Gini coefficients of the Lorenz curve analyses further showed considerable degrees of inequalities in the volume of manure marketed by different agents both across the agro-ecological zones and socio-economic domains. Manure marketing was found to be inefficient. Further, manure marketing in the study area is profitable with huge potentials for market development. 2009 2018-01-15T10:50:48Z 2018-01-15T10:50:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90194 en Limited Access Olayide, O., Alene, A., Ikpi, A. & Nziguheba, G. (2009). Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security. Journal of Food, Agriculture & Environment, 7(2), 540-545.
spellingShingle manure
marketing
socio-economic-ecological-modeling
self-sufficiency
out-sourcing
geographic information system
savanna
Olayide, O.
Alene, A.
Ikpi, A.
Nziguheba, Generose
Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title_full Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title_fullStr Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title_full_unstemmed Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title_short Manure marketing in the savannas of Nigeria: implications for sustainable food security
title_sort manure marketing in the savannas of nigeria implications for sustainable food security
topic manure
marketing
socio-economic-ecological-modeling
self-sufficiency
out-sourcing
geographic information system
savanna
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90194
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