Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study

The northern Cameroon cotton-based region, as well as the whole western and central African cotton belt, is mainly characterised by a cotton-based agricultural extension programme monitored by cotton companies. The names or field approaches of the companies may differ from one country to another, but they still rely on a strong extension team and programme followed up from seedling to harvesting, which give a relatively high performance to the cotton sectors. Cotton extension performances can be appreciated through the large areas covered, a large number of cotton farmers and relatively intensive agricultural practices (high levels of fertilisers and other chemical inputs, high average yield, etc.). The direct seeding mulch-based cropping system (DMC) extension programme began in 2007 as part of the soil conservation project (PCS) following the experimental phase in the Water-Soil-Tree Project (ESA) from 2002 to 2006. As the two soil conservation projects were both monitored by SODECOTON (cotton development company), the newly launched DMC extension programme had to choose between two different extension approaches: a structured extension approach relying on Sodecoton's skilled and experienced extension team, implying a well-defined technical message to be disseminated, and spontaneous extension, relying on the gradual construction of on-farm technical messages, and ongoing processes to adapt the cropping systems, hence little need for a highly-structured extension team but an agriculture-based progressive approach. This study addressed the two options not by giving a final answer as to the most suitable extension approach, but by investigating the advantages and constraints of each approach, along with common determinants for DMC extension programmes, such as seed supplies and community-based experiments, and up-scaling. The study was based on seven years' experience of the DMC testing and extension programme in northern Cameroon, including on-farm trials and spontaneous dissemination, village-based cropping system trials, and three years of a DMC pre-extension programme. According to the study, structured extension may be suitable for the dissemination of simple but definitive cropping systems by a skilled extension team. Consequently, any other improvement within the system may call for high input investment (skills and materials). This may be worthwhile in familiarising farmers with DMC techniques but -55 may limit their adoption of DMC systems, since simple and rigid options may not fulfil their main constraints, such as less fertiliser use, and appropriate weed control. Spontaneous DMC extension relies on continual adaptation of DMC techniques to each given context. This means that various DMC options may be suited to different contexts, excluding a single "able to disseminate" technical message. Therefore, for an extension team, the need for ongoing on-farm construction of technical messages may require new adaptive skills, taking into account each socio-economic and ecological constraint, which are of course ignored in structured extension. On the other hand, this maximum farmer involvement implies a minimum extension agent team. The rate of adoption by farmers is determined either by the extension agent dissemination rate (area or farmers he is able to supervise) for structured extension, or by the ability of the DMC options to respond to farmers' constraints for spontaneous extension.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Balarabe, Oumarou, Abou Abba, Abdoulaye, Olivier, Dominique, Naudin, Krishna
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: s.n.
Subjects:F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture, F07 - Façons culturales, Gossypium, semis direct, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803, http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229,
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/550313/
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record_format koha
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
topic F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
F07 - Façons culturales
Gossypium
semis direct
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229
F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
F07 - Façons culturales
Gossypium
semis direct
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229
spellingShingle F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
F07 - Façons culturales
Gossypium
semis direct
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229
F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
F07 - Façons culturales
Gossypium
semis direct
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229
Balarabe, Oumarou
Abou Abba, Abdoulaye
Olivier, Dominique
Naudin, Krishna
Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
description The northern Cameroon cotton-based region, as well as the whole western and central African cotton belt, is mainly characterised by a cotton-based agricultural extension programme monitored by cotton companies. The names or field approaches of the companies may differ from one country to another, but they still rely on a strong extension team and programme followed up from seedling to harvesting, which give a relatively high performance to the cotton sectors. Cotton extension performances can be appreciated through the large areas covered, a large number of cotton farmers and relatively intensive agricultural practices (high levels of fertilisers and other chemical inputs, high average yield, etc.). The direct seeding mulch-based cropping system (DMC) extension programme began in 2007 as part of the soil conservation project (PCS) following the experimental phase in the Water-Soil-Tree Project (ESA) from 2002 to 2006. As the two soil conservation projects were both monitored by SODECOTON (cotton development company), the newly launched DMC extension programme had to choose between two different extension approaches: a structured extension approach relying on Sodecoton's skilled and experienced extension team, implying a well-defined technical message to be disseminated, and spontaneous extension, relying on the gradual construction of on-farm technical messages, and ongoing processes to adapt the cropping systems, hence little need for a highly-structured extension team but an agriculture-based progressive approach. This study addressed the two options not by giving a final answer as to the most suitable extension approach, but by investigating the advantages and constraints of each approach, along with common determinants for DMC extension programmes, such as seed supplies and community-based experiments, and up-scaling. The study was based on seven years' experience of the DMC testing and extension programme in northern Cameroon, including on-farm trials and spontaneous dissemination, village-based cropping system trials, and three years of a DMC pre-extension programme. According to the study, structured extension may be suitable for the dissemination of simple but definitive cropping systems by a skilled extension team. Consequently, any other improvement within the system may call for high input investment (skills and materials). This may be worthwhile in familiarising farmers with DMC techniques but -55 may limit their adoption of DMC systems, since simple and rigid options may not fulfil their main constraints, such as less fertiliser use, and appropriate weed control. Spontaneous DMC extension relies on continual adaptation of DMC techniques to each given context. This means that various DMC options may be suited to different contexts, excluding a single "able to disseminate" technical message. Therefore, for an extension team, the need for ongoing on-farm construction of technical messages may require new adaptive skills, taking into account each socio-economic and ecological constraint, which are of course ignored in structured extension. On the other hand, this maximum farmer involvement implies a minimum extension agent team. The rate of adoption by farmers is determined either by the extension agent dissemination rate (area or farmers he is able to supervise) for structured extension, or by the ability of the DMC options to respond to farmers' constraints for spontaneous extension.
format conference_item
topic_facet F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture
F07 - Façons culturales
Gossypium
semis direct
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803
http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229
author Balarabe, Oumarou
Abou Abba, Abdoulaye
Olivier, Dominique
Naudin, Krishna
author_facet Balarabe, Oumarou
Abou Abba, Abdoulaye
Olivier, Dominique
Naudin, Krishna
author_sort Balarabe, Oumarou
title Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
title_short Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
title_full Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
title_fullStr Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
title_full_unstemmed Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study
title_sort structured or spontaneous extension of dmc techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? the northern cameroon case study
publisher s.n.
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/550313/
work_keys_str_mv AT balarabeoumarou structuredorspontaneousextensionofdmctechniquesinsmallscalecottonbasedagriculturethenortherncamerooncasestudy
AT abouabbaabdoulaye structuredorspontaneousextensionofdmctechniquesinsmallscalecottonbasedagriculturethenortherncamerooncasestudy
AT olivierdominique structuredorspontaneousextensionofdmctechniquesinsmallscalecottonbasedagriculturethenortherncamerooncasestudy
AT naudinkrishna structuredorspontaneousextensionofdmctechniquesinsmallscalecottonbasedagriculturethenortherncamerooncasestudy
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spelling dig-cirad-fr-5503132024-01-28T17:21:25Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/550313/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/550313/ Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study. Balarabe Oumarou, Abou Abba Abdoulaye, Olivier Dominique, Naudin Krishna. 2008. In : Investing in Sustainable Agriculture : the case of conservation agriculture and direct seeding mulch-based cropping system : Regional Workshop on Conservation Agricultures, Phonsavan, Laos, 28 October - 1 November 2008. s.l. : s.n., Résumé, 54-55. Regional Workshop on Conservation Agriculture, Phonsavan, Laos, 28 Octobre 2008/1 Novembre 2008. Structured or spontaneous extension of DMC techniques in small-scale cotton-based agriculture? The Northern Cameroon case study Balarabe, Oumarou Abou Abba, Abdoulaye Olivier, Dominique Naudin, Krishna eng 2008 s.n. Investing in Sustainable Agriculture : the case of conservation agriculture and direct seeding mulch-based cropping system : Regional Workshop on Conservation Agricultures, Phonsavan, Laos, 28 October - 1 November 2008 F08 - Systèmes et modes de culture F07 - Façons culturales Gossypium semis direct http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_3335 http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_25803 Cameroun http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_1229 The northern Cameroon cotton-based region, as well as the whole western and central African cotton belt, is mainly characterised by a cotton-based agricultural extension programme monitored by cotton companies. The names or field approaches of the companies may differ from one country to another, but they still rely on a strong extension team and programme followed up from seedling to harvesting, which give a relatively high performance to the cotton sectors. Cotton extension performances can be appreciated through the large areas covered, a large number of cotton farmers and relatively intensive agricultural practices (high levels of fertilisers and other chemical inputs, high average yield, etc.). The direct seeding mulch-based cropping system (DMC) extension programme began in 2007 as part of the soil conservation project (PCS) following the experimental phase in the Water-Soil-Tree Project (ESA) from 2002 to 2006. As the two soil conservation projects were both monitored by SODECOTON (cotton development company), the newly launched DMC extension programme had to choose between two different extension approaches: a structured extension approach relying on Sodecoton's skilled and experienced extension team, implying a well-defined technical message to be disseminated, and spontaneous extension, relying on the gradual construction of on-farm technical messages, and ongoing processes to adapt the cropping systems, hence little need for a highly-structured extension team but an agriculture-based progressive approach. This study addressed the two options not by giving a final answer as to the most suitable extension approach, but by investigating the advantages and constraints of each approach, along with common determinants for DMC extension programmes, such as seed supplies and community-based experiments, and up-scaling. The study was based on seven years' experience of the DMC testing and extension programme in northern Cameroon, including on-farm trials and spontaneous dissemination, village-based cropping system trials, and three years of a DMC pre-extension programme. According to the study, structured extension may be suitable for the dissemination of simple but definitive cropping systems by a skilled extension team. Consequently, any other improvement within the system may call for high input investment (skills and materials). This may be worthwhile in familiarising farmers with DMC techniques but -55 may limit their adoption of DMC systems, since simple and rigid options may not fulfil their main constraints, such as less fertiliser use, and appropriate weed control. Spontaneous DMC extension relies on continual adaptation of DMC techniques to each given context. This means that various DMC options may be suited to different contexts, excluding a single "able to disseminate" technical message. Therefore, for an extension team, the need for ongoing on-farm construction of technical messages may require new adaptive skills, taking into account each socio-economic and ecological constraint, which are of course ignored in structured extension. On the other hand, this maximum farmer involvement implies a minimum extension agent team. The rate of adoption by farmers is determined either by the extension agent dissemination rate (area or farmers he is able to supervise) for structured extension, or by the ability of the DMC options to respond to farmers' constraints for spontaneous extension. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess