A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience

In Ghana, the diversity and density of non-cocoa trees in cocoa farms is primarily the result of farmers’ managing natural processes of regeneration in forest-fallow systems. Tree diversity is therefore more a result of haphazard, uncoordinated decisions over a long period rather than advanced planning. Relying on natural regeneration processes greatly limits farmers’ ability to select desirable species or arrange their distribution within farms. As a result, the potential of diverse cocoa growing systems is limited in its ability to make significant contributions to household incomes or conservation of biodiversity on farm and in the surrounding landscape. This paper presents a six step tree diversification process that was developed and implemented with farmers in Amansie West and Atwima Mponua districts of Ghana’s Ashanti Region using a participatory action learning approach. In conjunction with 36 farmers in six farmer groups, a tree diversification framework was tested and implemented. Farmers used the framework to critically characterize and select desirable non-cocoa trees according to biophysical and socio-economic attributes, and then planted these species onto farms with the aim of providing favorable vegetative cover for cocoa, as well as securing valuable sources of timber and non-timber products. In total, 960 tree seedlings were planted on 31 farms using a designed 12 m x 12 m triangular planting arrangement with an initial planting density of 28 trees per acre. The value of this process is that it provides farmers with a flexible decision support tool for evaluating and integrating desirable trees into tree crop systems for increased diversity.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Asare, Richard 44694, 44695 Asare, R.A. autores/as
Format: biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Accra (Ghana): International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, 2008
Subjects:PLANTAS DE SOMBRA, EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA, CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA, GHANA,
Online Access:https://www.worldcocoafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/files_mf/asare2008.pdf
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spelling KOHA-OAI-BVE:1254962021-12-06T21:00:11ZA participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience Asare, Richard 44694 44695 Asare, R.A. autores/as Accra (Ghana): International Institute of Tropical Agriculture,2008engpdfIn Ghana, the diversity and density of non-cocoa trees in cocoa farms is primarily the result of farmers’ managing natural processes of regeneration in forest-fallow systems. Tree diversity is therefore more a result of haphazard, uncoordinated decisions over a long period rather than advanced planning. Relying on natural regeneration processes greatly limits farmers’ ability to select desirable species or arrange their distribution within farms. As a result, the potential of diverse cocoa growing systems is limited in its ability to make significant contributions to household incomes or conservation of biodiversity on farm and in the surrounding landscape. This paper presents a six step tree diversification process that was developed and implemented with farmers in Amansie West and Atwima Mponua districts of Ghana’s Ashanti Region using a participatory action learning approach. In conjunction with 36 farmers in six farmer groups, a tree diversification framework was tested and implemented. Farmers used the framework to critically characterize and select desirable non-cocoa trees according to biophysical and socio-economic attributes, and then planted these species onto farms with the aim of providing favorable vegetative cover for cocoa, as well as securing valuable sources of timber and non-timber products. In total, 960 tree seedlings were planted on 31 farms using a designed 12 m x 12 m triangular planting arrangement with an initial planting density of 28 trees per acre. The value of this process is that it provides farmers with a flexible decision support tool for evaluating and integrating desirable trees into tree crop systems for increased diversity. Incluye 63 referencias bibliográficas en las páginas 23-28In Ghana, the diversity and density of non-cocoa trees in cocoa farms is primarily the result of farmers’ managing natural processes of regeneration in forest-fallow systems. Tree diversity is therefore more a result of haphazard, uncoordinated decisions over a long period rather than advanced planning. Relying on natural regeneration processes greatly limits farmers’ ability to select desirable species or arrange their distribution within farms. As a result, the potential of diverse cocoa growing systems is limited in its ability to make significant contributions to household incomes or conservation of biodiversity on farm and in the surrounding landscape. This paper presents a six step tree diversification process that was developed and implemented with farmers in Amansie West and Atwima Mponua districts of Ghana’s Ashanti Region using a participatory action learning approach. In conjunction with 36 farmers in six farmer groups, a tree diversification framework was tested and implemented. Farmers used the framework to critically characterize and select desirable non-cocoa trees according to biophysical and socio-economic attributes, and then planted these species onto farms with the aim of providing favorable vegetative cover for cocoa, as well as securing valuable sources of timber and non-timber products. In total, 960 tree seedlings were planted on 31 farms using a designed 12 m x 12 m triangular planting arrangement with an initial planting density of 28 trees per acre. The value of this process is that it provides farmers with a flexible decision support tool for evaluating and integrating desirable trees into tree crop systems for increased diversity. PLANTAS DE SOMBRAEXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALACONOCIMIENTO INDIGENAGHANAhttps://www.worldcocoafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/files_mf/asare2008.pdf
institution IICA
collection Koha
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-sibiica
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Sistema de Bibliotecas IICA/CATIE
language eng
topic PLANTAS DE SOMBRA
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA
CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA
GHANA
PLANTAS DE SOMBRA
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA
CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA
GHANA
spellingShingle PLANTAS DE SOMBRA
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA
CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA
GHANA
PLANTAS DE SOMBRA
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA
CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA
GHANA
Asare, Richard 44694
44695 Asare, R.A. autores/as
A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
description In Ghana, the diversity and density of non-cocoa trees in cocoa farms is primarily the result of farmers’ managing natural processes of regeneration in forest-fallow systems. Tree diversity is therefore more a result of haphazard, uncoordinated decisions over a long period rather than advanced planning. Relying on natural regeneration processes greatly limits farmers’ ability to select desirable species or arrange their distribution within farms. As a result, the potential of diverse cocoa growing systems is limited in its ability to make significant contributions to household incomes or conservation of biodiversity on farm and in the surrounding landscape. This paper presents a six step tree diversification process that was developed and implemented with farmers in Amansie West and Atwima Mponua districts of Ghana’s Ashanti Region using a participatory action learning approach. In conjunction with 36 farmers in six farmer groups, a tree diversification framework was tested and implemented. Farmers used the framework to critically characterize and select desirable non-cocoa trees according to biophysical and socio-economic attributes, and then planted these species onto farms with the aim of providing favorable vegetative cover for cocoa, as well as securing valuable sources of timber and non-timber products. In total, 960 tree seedlings were planted on 31 farms using a designed 12 m x 12 m triangular planting arrangement with an initial planting density of 28 trees per acre. The value of this process is that it provides farmers with a flexible decision support tool for evaluating and integrating desirable trees into tree crop systems for increased diversity.
format
topic_facet PLANTAS DE SOMBRA
EXPLOTACION EN PEQUENA ESCALA
CONOCIMIENTO INDIGENA
GHANA
author Asare, Richard 44694
44695 Asare, R.A. autores/as
author_facet Asare, Richard 44694
44695 Asare, R.A. autores/as
author_sort Asare, Richard 44694
title A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
title_short A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
title_full A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
title_fullStr A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
title_full_unstemmed A participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: Ghanaian farmers' experience
title_sort participatory approach for tree diversification in cocoa farms: ghanaian farmers' experience
publisher Accra (Ghana): International Institute of Tropical Agriculture,
publishDate 2008
url https://www.worldcocoafoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/files_mf/asare2008.pdf
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