Strengthening understanding and perceptions of mineral fertilizer use among smallholder farmers: evidence from collective trials in western Kenya

Agriculture and Human Values - Tập 28 - Trang 27-38 - 2010
Michael Misiko1, Pablo Tittonell2, Ken E. Giller3, Paul Richards4
1Learning and Innovation Systems, Africa Rice Centre (AfricaRice), Cotonou, Benin
2Unité de Recherche Systèmes de Culture Annuels, Montpellier Cedex 5, France
3Plant Production Systems (PPS), Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands
4Technology and Agrarian Development (TAD), Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands

Tóm tắt

It is widely recognized that mineral fertilizers must play an important part in improving agricultural productivity in western Kenyan farming systems. This paper suggests that for this goal to be realized, farmers’ knowledge must be strengthened to improve their understanding of fertilizers and their use. We analyzed smallholder knowledge of fertilizers and nutrient management, and draw practical lessons from empirical collective fertilizer-response experiments. Data were gathered from the collective fertilizer-response trials, through focus group discussions, by participant observation, and via in-depth interviews representing 40 households. The collective trials showed that the application of nitrogen (N) or phosphorous (P) alone was insufficient to enhance yields in the study area. The response to P on the trial plots was mainly influenced by incidences of the parasitic Striga weed, by spatial variability or gradients in soil fertility of the experimental plots, and by interactions with N levels. These results inspired farmer to design and conduct experiments to compare crop performance with and without fertilizer, and between types of fertilizers, or responses on different soils. Participating farmers were able to differentiate types of fertilizer, and understood rates of application and the roles of respective fertilizers in nutrient supply. However, notions were broadly generated by unsteady yield responses when fertilizers were used across different fertility gradients, association with high cost (especially if recommended rates were to be applied), association of fertilizer use with hybrids and certain crops, historical factors, among other main aspects. We identified that strengthening fertilizer knowledge must be tailored within existing, albeit imperfect, systems of crop and animal husbandry. Farmers’ perceptions cannot be changed by promoting more fertilizer use alone, but may require a more basic approach that, for example, encourages farmer experimentation and practices to enhance soil properties such as carbon build-up in impoverished local soils.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Abdoulaye, T., and J.H. Sanders. 2005. Stages and determinants of fertilizer use in semiarid African agriculture: The Niger experience. Agricultural Economics 32(2): 167–179. Acland, J.D. 1971. East African crops: An introduction to the production of field and plantation crops in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. London: Longman. Anderson, J.M., and J.S.I. Ingram. 1993. Tropical soil biology and fertility: A handbook of methods, 2nd ed. Wallingford, UK: CAB International. Bannister, M.E., and P.K.R. Nair. 2003. Agroforestry adoption in Haiti: the importance of household and farm characteristics. Agroforestry Systems 57(2): 149–157. Bationo, A., F. Lompo, and S. Koala. 1998. Research on nutrient flows and balances in West Africa: State-of-the-art. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 71(1–3): 19–35. Bekunda, M.A., E. Nkonya, D. Mugendi, and J.J. Msaky. 2004. Soil fertility status, management, and research in East Africa. East African Journal of Rural Development 20(1): 94–112. Bentley, J.W. 1989. What farmers don’t know can’t help them: The strengths and weaknesses of indigenous technical knowledge in Honduras. Agriculture and Human Values 6(3): 25–31. Buerkert, A., A. Bationo, and H. Piepho. 2001. Efficient phosphorus application strategies for increased crop production in sub-Saharan West Africa. Field Crops Research 72(1): 1–15. Buresh, R.J., and K.E. Giller. 1998. Strategies to replenish soil fertility in African smallholder agriculture. In Soil fertility research for maize-based farming systems in Malawi and Zimbabwe, ed. S.R. Waddington, H.K. Murwira, J.D.T. Kumwenda, D. Hikwa, and F. Tagwira, 13–19. Harare, Zimbabwe: Soil Fert Net and CIMMYT-Zimbabwe. Crawford, E., V. Kelly, T.S. Jayne, and J. Howard. 2003. Input use and market development in Sub-Saharan Africa: An overview. Food Policy 28: 277–292. De Jager, A., D. Onduru, and C. Walaga. 2004. Facilitated learning in soil fertility management: assessing potentials of low-external-input technologies in east African farming systems. Agricultural Systems 79(2): 205–223. Defoer, T., A. Budelman, C. Toulmin, and S.E. Carter. 2000. Building common knowledge: Participatory learning and action research. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Royal Tropical Institute. Deugd, M., N. Röling, and E.M.A. Smaling. 1998. A new praxeology for integrated nutrient management, facilitating innovation with and by farmers. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 71: 271–285. Ellis, F. 1992. Agricultural policies in developing countries. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. FAO. 2004. Increasing fertilizer use and farmer access in sub-Saharan Africa. A literature review. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization. Farouque, G.M., and H. Tekeya. 2008. Farmers’ use of integrated soil fertility and nutrient management practices for sustainable crop production: a field-level study in Bangladesh. American Journal of Agricultural and Biological Sciences 3(4): 716–723. Fujisaka, S. 1989. The need to build upon farmer practice and knowledge: Reminders from selected upland conservation projects and policies. Agroforestry Systems 9(2): 141–153. Gruhn, P., F. Goletti, and M. Yudelman. 2000. Integrated nutrient management, soil fertility, and sustainable agriculture: Current issues and future challenges. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. Food, Agriculture, and the Environment Discussion Paper 32. Hoffmann, V., K. Probst, and A. Christinck. 2007. Farmers and researchers: How can collaborative advantages be created in participatory research and technology development? Agriculture and Human Values 24: 355–368. Howard, J., J. Jeje, V. Kelly, and D. Boughton. 2000. Comparing yields and profitability in MADER’s High- and Low-Input Maize Program. 1997/98 survey results and analysis. Maputo, Mozambique: Government of Mozambique, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. Research Report 39. Howeler, R.H., W. Watananonta, W. Wongkasem, and K. Klakhaeng. 2004. Working with farmers: The challenge of achieving adoption of more sustainable cassava production practices on sloping land in Asia. Paper presented at SSWM 2004, International Conference on Innovative Practices for Sustainable Sloping Land and Watershed Management, held in Chiangmai, Thailand. Sept 5–9, 2004. IFDC. 2003. Input subsidies and agricultural development: Issues and options for developing and transitional economies. Muscle Shoals, AL: International Fertilizer Development Center. Paper Series P-29. IFPRI. 1996. Policies to promote environmentally sustainable fertilizer use and supply to 2020. http://www.ifpri.org/2020/BRIEFS/NUMBER40.HTM. Accessed June 20, 2009. Jaetzold, R., and H. Schmidt. 1982. Farm management handbook of Kenya, vol. I–III. Nairobi, Kenya: Ministry of Agriculture (Kenya)/GTZ. Jiggins, J., and H. de Zeeuw. 1992. Participatory technology development in practice: Process and methods. In Farming for the future, ed. C. Reijntjes, B. Haverkort, and A. Waters-Bayer, 135–162. London, UK: MacMillan and Leusden, ILEIA. Khaliq, A., M.K. Abbasi, and T. Hussain. 2006. Effects of integrated use of organic and inorganic nutrient sources with effective microorganisms (EM) on seed cotton yield in Pakistan. Biorespource Technology 97(8): 967–972. Manyong, V.M., K.O. Makinde, N. Sanginga, B. Vanlauwe, and J. Diels. 2001. Fertilizer use and definition of farmer domains for impact-oriented research in the northern Guinea savanna of Nigeria. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 59: 129–141. Misiko, M. 2007. Fertile ground? Soil fertility management and the African smallholder. Ph.D. Thesis, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands. Muriithi, L.M.M., and J.W. Irungu. 2004. Effect of integrated use of inorganic fertilizer and organic manures on bacterial wilt incidence (BWI) and tuber yield in potato production systems on hill slopes of central Kenya. Journal of Mountain Science 1(1): 81–88. Netting, R.McC. 1993. Smallholders, householders: Farm families and the ecology of intensive, sustainable agriculture. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Newbould, P. 1989. The use of nitrogen fertilizer in agriculture. Where do we go practically and ecologically? Plant and Soil 115: 297–311. Onduru, D., A. De Jager., G. Gachini, and J. Diop. 2001. Exploring new pathways for innovative soil fertility management in Kenya. Managing Africa’s Soils No. 25. http://www.iied.org/pubs/pdfs/9044IIED.pdf. Accessed 31 January 2010. Place, F., P. Hebinck, and M. Omosa. 2003. Chronic poverty in rural western Kenya: its identification and implications for agricultural development. http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/rr142.pdf. Accessed May 3, 2009. Poulton, C., J. Kydd, and A. Dorward. 2006. Increasing fertilizer use in Africa: what have we learned?. Washington, DC: The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Ramisch, J.J., M. Misiko, I.E. Ekise, and J.B. Mukalama. 2006. Strengthening ‘folk ecology’: Community-based learning for soil fertility management, western Kenya. International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability 4(2): 154–168. Röling, N., and J.N. Pretty. 1997. Extension’s role in sustainable agricultural development. In Improving agricultural extension. A reference manual, 181–191. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization. Röling, N., and E. Van de Fliert. 1994. Transforming extension for sustainable agriculture: The case of integrated pest management in rice in Indonesia. Agriculture and Human Values 11(2–3): 96–108. Shalit, H., and H. Binswanger. 1984. Fertilizer subsidies: A review of policy issues with special emphasis on Western Africa. Washington, DC: World Bank, Research Unit, Agriculture and Rural Development Department, Operational Policy Staff. November (Discussion Paper ARU No. 27). Smaling, E.M.A., S.S. Nwanda, and B.H. Janssen. 1997. Soil fertility in Africa is at stake. In Replenishing soil fertility in Africa, eds. R.J. Buresh, P.A. Sanchez, and F. Calhoun, 47–63. Soil Science Society of America Special Publication 51. Stoorvogel, J., and E. Smaling. 1990. Assessment of soil nutrient depletion in sub-Saharan Africa: 1983–2000. Report No. 28, vol. 1–4, Wageningen, Netherlands: Winand Staring Centre. Tegemeo Institute for Agricultural Development and Policy. 2006. Can the market deliver? Lessons from Kenya’s rising use of fertilizer following liberalization. Policy Brief No. 7. July. Nairobi, Kenya: Tegemeo Institute for Agricultural Development and Policy. Tittonell, P., B. Vanlauwe., N. de Ridder, and K.E. Giller. 2007. Heterogeneity of crop productivity and resource use efficiency within smallholder Kenyan farms: Soil fertility gradients or management intensity gradients? Agricultural Systems 94(2): 376–390. Tittonell, P., B. Vanlauwe, P.A. Leffelaar, E.C. Rowe, and K.E. Giller. 2005. Exploring diversity in soil fertility management of smallholder farms in western Kenya: I. heterogeneity at region and farm scale. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 110: 149–165. Tropical Soil Biology and Fertility Programme. 2001. Folk ecology: Report on the preliminary community studies undertaken in August–September 2001 in western Kenya. Nairobi. Kenya: TSBF-UNESCO. Vanlauwe, B., and K.E. Giller. 2006. Popular myths around soil fertility management in sub-Saharan Africa. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment 116: 34–46. Vanlauwe, B., J. Diels, N. Sanginga, and R. Merckx (eds.). 2002. Integrated plant nutrient management in Sub-Saharan Africa. Wallingford, UK: CAB International. Vanlauwe, B., P. Tittonell, and J. Mukalama. 2005. Within-farm soil fertility gradients affect response of maize to fertilizer application in western Kenya. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 76: 171–182. Wangila, J., R. Rommelse, and J. deWolffe. 1999. Characterization of households in the pilot project area of western Kenya. Nairobi, Kenya: International Centre for Research in Agroforestry, Nairobi. Unpublished report.