2020
DOI: 10.5897/ajar2020.15018
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Constraints limiting the improvement of manure management as climate smart technology for smallholder dairy farmers

Abstract: The global quest for a sustainable bio-economy has brought to the fore importance of engaging agricultural systems in the production and in practice change. There have been issues limiting farmers from improving the practice of manure management as smart climate technology. The objective of this paper was to highlight the constraints, type, and valuation of manure types and information sources that smallholder dairy farmers find it useful to change practices regarding manure management. In this present study, … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Second, low uptake of having a biodigester and practicing feed conservation across most households indicates that these practices require (labor, finance) investments that are unrealistic or are currently not worth the perceived benefits. The same holds for manure management practices in Nandi and Bomet (see detailed elaboration on technical and socio-economic constraints to improve manure management in Nandi by Owino et al, 2020a). Again, before fixating on smallholders' uptake of these practices, LEDS efforts could be on further elaborating more structural reasons for generally low uptake.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Second, low uptake of having a biodigester and practicing feed conservation across most households indicates that these practices require (labor, finance) investments that are unrealistic or are currently not worth the perceived benefits. The same holds for manure management practices in Nandi and Bomet (see detailed elaboration on technical and socio-economic constraints to improve manure management in Nandi by Owino et al, 2020a). Again, before fixating on smallholders' uptake of these practices, LEDS efforts could be on further elaborating more structural reasons for generally low uptake.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mitigating GHG emissions from dairy production involves improving feed quality, managing manure, and enhancing animal husbandry (Ericksen & Crane, 2018). However, dairy management varies from extensive to intensive systems (Odero-Waitituh, 2017), including differences in feeding and manure management practices (Owino et al, 2020a;Ndung'u, 2021). This diversity stems from a mix of agro-ecological, socio-cultural, economic, and institutional conditions, embedding practices in their regions (Descheemaeker et al, 2016).…”
Section: Problem Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cluster analysis was performed using spatially explicit data on rainfall, temperature and elevation. These variables are known to shape dairy farming suitability and systems (e.g., Jesse et al, 2020). To identify the appropriate number of clusters per district, the "natural breaks" feature on QGIS was used.…”
Section: Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%