Loading…

The farm income and food security implications of adopting fertilizer micro-dosing and tied-ridge technologies under semi-arid environments in central Tanzania

Adopting fertilizer input and rainwater harvesting techniques play a significant role in minimizing soil nutrient deficiency and moisture stress impact, both prime causes of low crop productivity in Sub-Saharan Africa. This study analyses the extent to which fertilizer micro-dosing (MD) and tied-rid...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of arid environments 2019-07, Vol.166, p.60-67
Main Authors: Habtemariam, Lemlem Teklegiorgis, Mgeni, Charles Peter, Mutabazi, Khamaldin Daud, Sieber, Stefan
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Adopting fertilizer input and rainwater harvesting techniques play a significant role in minimizing soil nutrient deficiency and moisture stress impact, both prime causes of low crop productivity in Sub-Saharan Africa. This study analyses the extent to which fertilizer micro-dosing (MD) and tied-ridge (TR) technologies can improve smallholder farmers’ food security and farm income. A household survey data along with on-farm trial data collected from semi-arid Tanzania is used for the analysis. The trade-off analysis for multi-dimensional impact assessment model (TOA-MD) is applied for the income and food security impact assessment. The on-farm trial shows a yield increase ranging from 10 to 300 percent for millet, and between 60 and 400 percent for sunflower. The TOA-MD analysis shows that between 52 and 79 percent of farms could be positively influenced to adopt the technologies. The increase in mean net return per farm ranges between 186 and 305 PPP USD. Adoption of the technologies would decrease the percentage of food insecure farmers between 1.8 and 7.1 percent. The study concludes that the technologies have the potential to improve yield and farm income for many farmers. However, these technologies alone would not bring significant change in terms of reducing poverty and food insecurity. •We assess to what extent fertilizer micro-dosing (MD) and tied-ridging (TR) benefit farmers.•MD and TR can increase yield of millet and sunflower under semi-arid environment.•Many farms would increase income from adopting the technologies.•Implementing the technologies on few crops may not bring significant improvement in food insecurity and poverty.
ISSN:0140-1963
1095-922X
DOI:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2019.02.011