1. Farmers’ perception and reasons for practicing farmer managed natural regeneration in Tigray, Ethiopia
- Author
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Rikiatu Husseini, Negasi Solomon, Emiru Birhane, Jeremy Haggar, and Tigist Kibru
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Farmer-managed natural regeneration ,Forestry ,010501 environmental sciences ,Livelihood ,Simple random sample ,01 natural sciences ,Peasant ,Nonprobability sampling ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Respondent ,Socioeconomics ,business ,Soil conservation ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR) is a rapid, low cost and easily replicated approach to restore and improve degraded agricultural, forest and pasture lands. The study was conducted in low (500–1500 m.a.s.l) and mid (1500–2300 m.a.s.l) altitude agro-ecologies of Tigray region assessing farmer’s perception and reasons to practice FMNR. Purposive sampling was used to select three peasant associations (PA’s) from each agro-ecology. Simple random sampling was used to select respondents from household heads practicing FMNR. There were 15 respondents from each PA. Total respondents used for the study in both agro-ecologies were 90. All the data required for the study was collected through in-depth household survey and group discussions. Forty two percent (42.2%) of the respondents had 21–30 years of FMNR experience. Seventeen percent of the respondents with FMNR experience were from lowland and 26% were from mid land agro-ecology. FMNR has been practiced for more than two decades in the study areas. In both low and midland agro-ecologies, motivation of the respondents to practice FMNR was the training received from expert’s (37.1%) and neighbors’ success (29.2%). In the lowland, respondent’s main purpose to practice FMNR was fuel wood and fruit collection (49%) while in the midland the objectives were for fuel wood (50%), soil conservation (47%) and fodder (47%). FMNR has enormous importance in the livelihoods of the rural people especially in providing fuel wood, food/fruits, construction materials and farm equipment.
- Published
- 2020