Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria

High yielding and disease resistant plantain and banana hybrids and its associated technologies generated by IITA to combat the menace of black Sigatoka disease (Mycosphaerella fijiensis) were massively disseminated in year 2000. Since the hybrids were slightly different from the existing varieties...

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Autores principales: Faturoti, B.O., Emah, G.N., Isife, B.I., Tenkouano, A., Lemchi, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91384
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author Faturoti, B.O.
Emah, G.N.
Isife, B.I.
Tenkouano, A.
Lemchi, J.
author_browse Emah, G.N.
Faturoti, B.O.
Isife, B.I.
Lemchi, J.
Tenkouano, A.
author_facet Faturoti, B.O.
Emah, G.N.
Isife, B.I.
Tenkouano, A.
Lemchi, J.
author_sort Faturoti, B.O.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description High yielding and disease resistant plantain and banana hybrids and its associated technologies generated by IITA to combat the menace of black Sigatoka disease (Mycosphaerella fijiensis) were massively disseminated in year 2000. Since the hybrids were slightly different from the existing varieties in fruit size there was a need to assess thier prospects. Structured questionnaire and interview schedule were used to collect data on the adoption of the fourteen disseminated innovations among 85 randomly selected farmers in 15 villages drawn from the three states. Correlation analysis was used to test the strength of relationship between the respondents personal and socio economic factors, the variables investigated and the adoption index. The results showed that all the respondents adopted at least one of the 14 disseminated innovations. Average adoption level was 40.33% ranging from Rivers 36%, Akwa-Ibom 38% and Bayelsa 47%. The adoption process was strongly influenced by household size, educational attainment, farming experience, frequency of extension visit, overall experience from innovation, market access, access to credit and profit as a result of the technology. It was concluded that the high level of adoption of the technology was not unconnected with the induced model of adoption where farmers saw the yield before embarking on the cultivation and the support (educational and material incentive) received from the disseminating institutions.
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spelling CGSpace913842023-06-13T04:45:49Z Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria Faturoti, B.O. Emah, G.N. Isife, B.I. Tenkouano, A. Lemchi, J. hybrids disease resistant adoption innovations induced model High yielding and disease resistant plantain and banana hybrids and its associated technologies generated by IITA to combat the menace of black Sigatoka disease (Mycosphaerella fijiensis) were massively disseminated in year 2000. Since the hybrids were slightly different from the existing varieties in fruit size there was a need to assess thier prospects. Structured questionnaire and interview schedule were used to collect data on the adoption of the fourteen disseminated innovations among 85 randomly selected farmers in 15 villages drawn from the three states. Correlation analysis was used to test the strength of relationship between the respondents personal and socio economic factors, the variables investigated and the adoption index. The results showed that all the respondents adopted at least one of the 14 disseminated innovations. Average adoption level was 40.33% ranging from Rivers 36%, Akwa-Ibom 38% and Bayelsa 47%. The adoption process was strongly influenced by household size, educational attainment, farming experience, frequency of extension visit, overall experience from innovation, market access, access to credit and profit as a result of the technology. It was concluded that the high level of adoption of the technology was not unconnected with the induced model of adoption where farmers saw the yield before embarking on the cultivation and the support (educational and material incentive) received from the disseminating institutions. 2006 2018-03-07T11:25:46Z 2018-03-07T11:25:46Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91384 en Open Access Faturoti, B.O., Emah, G.N., Isife, B.I., Tenkouano, A. & Lemchi, J. (2006). Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria. African Journal of Biotechnology, 5(14), 1319-1323.
spellingShingle hybrids
disease resistant
adoption
innovations
induced model
Faturoti, B.O.
Emah, G.N.
Isife, B.I.
Tenkouano, A.
Lemchi, J.
Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title_full Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title_fullStr Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title_short Prospects and determinants of adoption of IITA plantain and banana based technologies in three Niger Delta States of Nigeria
title_sort prospects and determinants of adoption of iita plantain and banana based technologies in three niger delta states of nigeria
topic hybrids
disease resistant
adoption
innovations
induced model
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91384
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