Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya

Farms in Kiambu District are very small owing to high population pressure and need to be intensively farmed to provide enough food for consumption and sale. Since soil nitrogen levels are low, the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure needs to be increased to improve land productivity. This study identified the socioeconomic factors influencing the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure for maize production in Kiambu District. A multistage sampling procedure was used to select divisions and farmers to be included in the study. Three divisions were randomly selected, from which a sample of 97 farmers was obtained. Data were collected at the farm level using a structured questionnaire. Soil and manure samples were taken from sample farms for laboratory analysis. The soil analysis showed that soils in Kiambu District have a high organic carbon content (3-4%), which reflects high levels of applied organic matter, most likely coupled with low rates of mineralization. Soils are low nitrogen (N), indicating that more N needs to be added. Phosphorus (P) levels are not severely limiting, which might reflect a build-up of previously applied P. The logistic regression showed that extension and off-farm income were significant factors influencing the adoption of manure. Age of household head, extension, membership in an organization, and off-farm income significantly influenced the use of inorganic fertilizer. The use of both inorganic fertilizer and manure was significantly influenced by extension, membership in an organization, household size, hired labor for manure application, livestock ownership, and off-farm income. Extension, the most significant factor affecting the use of manure and fertilizer, should promote adoption by providing advice on improved on-farm manure management and fertilizer recommendations, particularly in terms of crop suitability and timing and method of application. Also the extension service should advise fertilizers dealers to supply the packages required by farmers. To further aid adoption, capital (credit) constraints faced by farmers need to be relieved. Improved market information will assist farmers in securing the best prices for their outputs and inputs.

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Main Authors: Makokha, S., Kimani, S., Mwangi, W.M., Verkuijl, H., Musembi, F.
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: KARI 2001
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, FERTILIZERS, ZEA MAYS, INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS, PRODUCTION FACTORS, GREEN MANURES, MAIZE, CROP PRODUCTION,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1025
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-10252021-02-09T18:25:24Z Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya Makokha, S. Kimani, S. Mwangi, W.M. Verkuijl, H. Musembi, F. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY FERTILIZERS ZEA MAYS INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS PRODUCTION FACTORS GREEN MANURES MAIZE CROP PRODUCTION Farms in Kiambu District are very small owing to high population pressure and need to be intensively farmed to provide enough food for consumption and sale. Since soil nitrogen levels are low, the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure needs to be increased to improve land productivity. This study identified the socioeconomic factors influencing the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure for maize production in Kiambu District. A multistage sampling procedure was used to select divisions and farmers to be included in the study. Three divisions were randomly selected, from which a sample of 97 farmers was obtained. Data were collected at the farm level using a structured questionnaire. Soil and manure samples were taken from sample farms for laboratory analysis. The soil analysis showed that soils in Kiambu District have a high organic carbon content (3-4%), which reflects high levels of applied organic matter, most likely coupled with low rates of mineralization. Soils are low nitrogen (N), indicating that more N needs to be added. Phosphorus (P) levels are not severely limiting, which might reflect a build-up of previously applied P. The logistic regression showed that extension and off-farm income were significant factors influencing the adoption of manure. Age of household head, extension, membership in an organization, and off-farm income significantly influenced the use of inorganic fertilizer. The use of both inorganic fertilizer and manure was significantly influenced by extension, membership in an organization, household size, hired labor for manure application, livestock ownership, and off-farm income. Extension, the most significant factor affecting the use of manure and fertilizer, should promote adoption by providing advice on improved on-farm manure management and fertilizer recommendations, particularly in terms of crop suitability and timing and method of application. Also the extension service should advise fertilizers dealers to supply the packages required by farmers. To further aid adoption, capital (credit) constraints faced by farmers need to be relieved. Improved market information will assist farmers in securing the best prices for their outputs and inputs. vi, 25 pages 2012-01-06T05:10:01Z 2012-01-06T05:10:01Z 2001 Book 970-648-070-6 http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1025 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Kenya Mexico KARI CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FERTILIZERS
ZEA MAYS
INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
GREEN MANURES
MAIZE
CROP PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FERTILIZERS
ZEA MAYS
INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
GREEN MANURES
MAIZE
CROP PRODUCTION
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FERTILIZERS
ZEA MAYS
INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
GREEN MANURES
MAIZE
CROP PRODUCTION
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FERTILIZERS
ZEA MAYS
INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
GREEN MANURES
MAIZE
CROP PRODUCTION
Makokha, S.
Kimani, S.
Mwangi, W.M.
Verkuijl, H.
Musembi, F.
Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
description Farms in Kiambu District are very small owing to high population pressure and need to be intensively farmed to provide enough food for consumption and sale. Since soil nitrogen levels are low, the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure needs to be increased to improve land productivity. This study identified the socioeconomic factors influencing the use of inorganic fertilizers and manure for maize production in Kiambu District. A multistage sampling procedure was used to select divisions and farmers to be included in the study. Three divisions were randomly selected, from which a sample of 97 farmers was obtained. Data were collected at the farm level using a structured questionnaire. Soil and manure samples were taken from sample farms for laboratory analysis. The soil analysis showed that soils in Kiambu District have a high organic carbon content (3-4%), which reflects high levels of applied organic matter, most likely coupled with low rates of mineralization. Soils are low nitrogen (N), indicating that more N needs to be added. Phosphorus (P) levels are not severely limiting, which might reflect a build-up of previously applied P. The logistic regression showed that extension and off-farm income were significant factors influencing the adoption of manure. Age of household head, extension, membership in an organization, and off-farm income significantly influenced the use of inorganic fertilizer. The use of both inorganic fertilizer and manure was significantly influenced by extension, membership in an organization, household size, hired labor for manure application, livestock ownership, and off-farm income. Extension, the most significant factor affecting the use of manure and fertilizer, should promote adoption by providing advice on improved on-farm manure management and fertilizer recommendations, particularly in terms of crop suitability and timing and method of application. Also the extension service should advise fertilizers dealers to supply the packages required by farmers. To further aid adoption, capital (credit) constraints faced by farmers need to be relieved. Improved market information will assist farmers in securing the best prices for their outputs and inputs.
format Book
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
FERTILIZERS
ZEA MAYS
INPUT OUTPUT ANALYSIS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
GREEN MANURES
MAIZE
CROP PRODUCTION
author Makokha, S.
Kimani, S.
Mwangi, W.M.
Verkuijl, H.
Musembi, F.
author_facet Makokha, S.
Kimani, S.
Mwangi, W.M.
Verkuijl, H.
Musembi, F.
author_sort Makokha, S.
title Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
title_short Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
title_full Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
title_fullStr Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in Kiambu District, Kenya
title_sort determinants of fertilizer and manure use for maize production in kiambu district, kenya
publisher KARI
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/1025
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