Challenges and Opportunities for Agricultural Intensification of the Humid Highland Systems of Sub-Saharan Africa /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Corporativo: SpringerLink (Online service)
Otros Autores: Vanlauwe, Bernard. (Editor ), van Asten, Piet. (Editor ), Blomme, Guy. (Editor )
Formato: eBook
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014.
Edición:1st ed. 2014.
Materias:
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Theme 1 – System characterization
  • Bridging the soil map of Rwanda with the ‘farmer’s mental soil map’ for an effective Integrated and Participatory Watershed Management research model
  • Intensification of crop–livestock farming systems in East Africa: A comparison of selected sites in the highlands of Ethiopia and Kenya
  • Rapid assessment of potato productivity in Kigezi and Elgon Highlands in Uganda
  • Farmers’ knowledge and perception of climbing beans-based cropping systems in Rwanda
  • Securing crop phosphorus availability in the humid tropics: Alternative sources and improved management options - A review
  • Theme 2 – System components
  • A decade of agricultural research in Rwanda: Achievements and the way forward
  • Do commercial biological and chemical products increase crop yields and economic returns under smallholder farmer conditions?
  • Enhanced utilization of biotechnology research and development innovations in eastern and central Africa for agro-ecological intensification
  • Investing in Land and Water Management Practices in the Ethiopian Highlands: Short- or Long-Term Benefits?
  • Yield responses of cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) varieties to phosphorus fertilizer application across a soil fertility gradient in western Kenyan highlands
  • Innovations to overcome staking challenges to climbing beans production by smallholders in Rwanda
  • Crop–livestock interaction for improved productivity: Effect of selected varieties of field pea (Pisum sativum L.) on grain and straw parameters
  • From standards to practices: The intensive and improved rice (SRI and SRA) systems in the Madagascar Highlands
  • Identification of elite, high yielding and stable maize cultivars for Rwandan mid-altitude environments
  • Determination of appropriate rate and mode of lime application on acid soils of western Kenya: targeting small scale farmers
  • Assessment of fertilizer efficiency in Walungu weathered soil on maize yield
  • Improvement of sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam) production with fertilizer and organic inputs in Rwanda
  • Evaluation of sweetpotato varieties for the potential of dual-purpose in different agroecological zones of Kenya
  • Theme 3 – Drivers and determinants for adoption
  • Livelihoods heterogeneity and water management in Malawi: policy implications for irrigation development
  • Access to subsidized certified improved rice seed and poverty reduction: evidence from rice farming households in Nigeria
  • Factors influencing the adoption of improved rice varieties in Rwanda: An application of the Conditional Logit Model (CLM)
  • Assessing the influence of farmers’ field schools and market links on investments in soil fertility management under potato production in Uganda
  • Bean utilization and commercialization in Great Lakes region of Central Africa: The case of smallholder farmers in Burundi
  • Enhancing farmers’ access to quality planting materials through community-based seed and seedling systems: Experiences from the Western Highlands of Cameroon
  • Returns to production of common bean, soybean, and groundnut in Rwanda
  • Theme 4- Knowledge-intensive approaches
  • Beyond the pilot sites: Can knowledge-intensive technologies diffuse spontaneously?
  • Agricultural innovations that increase productivity and generates incomes: Lessons on identification and testing processes in Rwandan agricultural Innovation Platforms
  • ISFM adaptation trials: farmer-to farmer facilitation, farmer-led data collection, technology learning and uptake.