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Traditional agricultural landscapes and their importance in the fight against land degradationLarsson, Jimmie January 2020 (has links)
Markförstöring är idag ett utbrett problem som till stor del är orsakat av konventionellt jordbruk och ohållbar markanvändning. Traditionella jordbrukslandskap har i många områden bedrivits under lång tid utan att uppvisa samma problem samtidigt som de haft hög artmångfald. Denna litteraturstudie studerar dessa landskap med inriktning på Europa och Ostasien. Resultatet visar att det är flera faktorer som är viktiga i deras bevarande av artmångfald såsom heterogenitet, konnektivitet och intermediära störningar. Utöver detta så är effektiv återvinning av näringsämnen, användning av poly-kulturer och jordbrukslandskapens låga intensitet, viktiga faktorer som skyddat dem från överexploatering. Problemet med traditionella jordbrukslandskap är att de inte är ekonomiskt hållbara. Även om restaurering av ekosystem är ett av FN:s mål det kommande decenniet så sker det inte om det inte finns ett incitament att restaurera. Genom att bättre förstå hållbara jordbrukslandskap kan vi i framtiden skapa både ekologiskt resilienta och ekonomiskt stabila produktionslandskap som inte bara gynnar samhället utan även artmångfalden.
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A trans-disciplinary approach integrating farm system data to better manage and predict Striga infestations /MacLean, Roger R. January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Technological change in contemporary peasant farming systems of northern Chiapas, MexicoTipper, Richard January 1994 (has links)
A study of the process of technological change in contemporary Mayan agricultural systems was undertaken by an action research method that involved close collaboration with the rural development efforts of farmers in the northern highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. Firstly, the socioeconomic context of technological change in Chiapas was described, with special reference to the effects of markets on agricultural development. Secondly, theta actors affecting the productivity and sustainability of the regions principal agricultural systems: maize and beans for subsistence and coffee for cash were described and measured. The use of traditional swidden methods of maize cultivation with shorter fallow periods was found to be causing a significant decline in the fertility of soils. Alternative, non-burning methods were found to be sustainable in terms of soil fertility, but required high labour inputs and were less productive during a 2-3 year transition period. Despite government programmes to promote the development of coffee plantations most farmers had adopted only ad hoc improvements, and coffee system productivities were found to be generally low. Models integrating dynamic and linear progranuning components of the improvement problem systems in maize and coffee production were constructed using evidence from the field studies. By examining a number of hypothetical scenarios, further hypotheses about the coffee and maize systems were generated. It was inferred that the relative scarcity of farm labour, cash or land resources would affect the optimum technical decisions of farmers. In particular, it was concluded that farmers with scarce cash resources would face most difficulty (in terms of loss of effective income) in adopting non-burning maize techniques and the promoted methods of coffee plantation improvement. On the basis of the evidence from the field studies and the modelling exercises a number of technical, project and policy recommendations were advocated. These were based upon the objective of maximising the potential competitive strengths of the peasant mode of production, including: the efficient use of marginal, dispersed and inaccessible resources and the production of a wide range of specialised agricultural and forestry products.
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Öjingsvallen vid sjön Öjingen : en pollenanalytisk studie av en fäbodvall i Ängersjö, Hälsingland /Karlsson, Hanna. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Examensarbete. / Examensarbete i biologi.
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The experience of pastoral landscapes /Hägerhäll, Caroline, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Alnarp : Sveriges lantbruksuniv. / Härtill 5 uppsatser och 1 bildbil.
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Building farm resilience : prospects and challenges for organic farming /Milestad, Rebecka, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Uppsala : Sveriges lantbruksuniv., 2003. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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Farmers ain't no fools exploring the role of participatory rural appraisal to access indigenous knowledge and enhance sustainable development research and planning : a case study of Dusun Pausan, Bali, Indonesia /Wickham, Trevor Wayne, January 1993 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Waterloo, 1993. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 191-211).
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The impact of farmer support programmes on market access of small holder farmers in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal ProvincesMpuzu, Misery Sikelwa January 2013 (has links)
Most smallholder farmers in South Africa are characterized by poor resources such as land, labour and capital while they play an important role in poverty alleviation especially in poor rural areas. Smallholder farmers are increasingly recognized because of their contribution to household food security. The world markets are increasingly being integrated due to globalization and liberalization. As a result, smallholder farmers are facing increasing market competition, not only in international markets but in local markets as well. However, smallholder farmers often face a number of barriers to accessing these markets arising in part from the tightening of food safety and quality standards requiring compliance with phytosanitary and sanitary standards and growing power of supply chain integration. Furthermore, the viability of these smallholder producers is constrained by institutional obstacles which include lack of access to information, high marketing and transaction costs and low quality and lack of critical volume in the absence of bulking up arrangements, etc. These barriers have contributed to the exclusion of smallholder/small-scale farmers from formal markets. In order to address these obstacles and speed up the pace of agrarian reform many support schemes (farmer support programmes) are now being designed to specifically address market access and value chain issues through unique co-innovation arrangements to improve the farmer’s access to profitable international chains. A number of farmer support programmes (FSP) have been implemented in South Africa to reduce the risk of a lack of capacity and a lack of economic and/or financial experience in smallholder farms. Intervention measures have been instituted to these smallholder farmers to assist them to move out of poverty through agricultural production. The aim of this study was to understand the roles played by farmer support programmes in addressing income and welfare levels and sustainability of smallholder farmers in South Africa. Eighty nine (89) farmers were interviewed for this study and almost half (49%) of them received support from various organizations while 51% of the sampled farmers did not receive any support. The study was designed to compare the two groups between the treated and control group to assess the impact of these programmes.Using a Tobit and Propensity Score Matching technique, potential diffusion effects were eliminated between farmers supported by Farmer Support Programmes and farmers that did not belong to support services. The latter was selected from comparable communities with no agricultural support services. Findings from the Tobit regression and propensity score matching are consistent across the two methods, suggesting that being a member of any agricultural support programme has a significant positive impact on income and welfare of smallholder farmers.Farmer Support Programmes and collective marketing activities such as the collection and sale of members’ products appear to have a significant and positive impact on smallholder welfare of those farmers engaged in them. In the second analysis the study tested the types of arrangements that farmers would adopt to market their produce. From the results it was established that those farmers who were supported by institutional arrangements or FSP had better access to markets than those farmers who operated as individuals. Marginal effects are used to show the degree to which farmers chose a particular marketing channel or institutional arrangement that these farmers take when trying to access better paying markets. Then the final analysis is on factors that determine the extent to which collective action contribute to farmers’ income and market access. A number of variables (age, distance to the market, region the farmers are located) were evaluated using the multinomial regression model. Empirical results suggest that among South African cooperatives, those established in KwaZulu-Natal and partly in the Eastern Cape and upon the voluntary initiative of farmers are more sustainable and have access to better paying markets both locally and internationally than the other areas. The results also show that NGO-supported cooperatives have a longer life span than Government controlled cooperatives.
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Comparison of soil erosion under no-till and conventional tillage systems in the high rainfall Mlondozi area, Mpumalanga province, South AfricaKidson, Michael Vernon January 2014 (has links)
Rural agriculture in Mlondozi, as for South Africa, is has a low productivity, which is the result of poor
knowledge, information, beliefs and land tenure which limits the acquiring of loans for inputs.
A LandCare Project was conducted for four years. Training was in the form of farmer managed research
demonstrations which included the taught Conservation agriculture farming system which they
compared to the Traditional farming system. Eighteen farmers initially joined the program and their soils
were monitored for four years. At the end of the project undisturbed soil samples were taken from their
fields where maize was cultivated following no-till (NT) farming system, and the conventional tillage
system (CT).
The soils from the two farming systems were compared using a laboratory rainfall simulator for run-off,
erosion and infiltration. Each storm event in the rainfall simulator lasted for a period of 110 minutes (50
rotations). There were two statistical analyses done on the results. The first was a t-test was applied to
the data to test for differences between the two systems, with a sample size of 72, at 18 sights with 4
replicates, except for carbon which was 36 analyses for the 18 sights. There was a significantly higher
soil loss for NT soils for storm 1, compared to the CT soil, and a non significant difference for run-off for storms 1 and 2. Infiltration was significantly lower for the NT soil for the first storm, and not significantly
higher for the NT soil for the second storm.
The CT soils had a significantly higher infiltration rate for the first 16 rotations. After 68 minutes (rotation
34) the NT soils infiltration rate was higher. For simulated storm 2 the CT soils had a slightly higher
infiltration rate up to 32 minutes (16 rotations) where after NT soils had a higher infiltration rate. Between
48 and 80 minutes (rotations 24 and 40) the NT soils had a significantly higher infiltration rate. From the
results it can be concluded that the NT soils maintained the aggregate stability far longer than the CT
soils.
The initial and final infiltration rates were compared for the NT and CT soils for the simulated storms 1
and 2. The CT soils’ initial and final infiltration rate was similar, while the NT soils had a higher initial
and final infiltration rate for the second storm, due to the soils settling with the first storm. The results
question current literature that states that sealing of soils is a permanent feature. The carbon content
of the NT soils was not significantly higher than the CT soils, which corresponded with the results. / Dissertation MInst (Agrar)--University of Pretoria, 2014 / gm2015 / Plant Production and Soil Science / MInst (Agrar) / Unrestricted
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The spatial configuration of agricultural practices and the role of resilience in farming at Khutwaneng, BokoniHenshall, Tiffany Fae January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science. Johannesburg, 2016. / Despite the expansive size of the Bokoni complex, our knowledge with regards to many aspects of its occupancy is limited. Due to the agriculturally centred nature of the Bokoni, it is important to understand this facet of Bokoni life from as many perspectives as possible. This project aims to take us one step closer to achieving a deeper understanding of the agricultural practices of the Bokoni people. Through my fieldwork and the processing of collected data on land management practices of this society have been explored. Additionally Khutwaneng and the Bokoni complex in general, provide an interesting case study in the role of resilience in agricultural communities. Their agricultural success is inseparably linked to the adaptive strategies employed throughout their occupancy. This allowed for the consideration of the recursive relationship between resilience and sustainability, furthering our understanding of the Bokoni complex. / LG2017
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