Offered Papers Theme A: Efficient Production from Grassland
Description
Smallholder dairying is an important enterprise in the highlands of E Africa. Farm sizes average 1-2ha and zero-grazing, cut-and-carry systems predominate. Inadequate protein reduces milk production and forces many farmers to spend scarce cash on commercial dairy meal supplements. In 1991, on-farm trials on fodder shrubs were started in Embu District as a collaborative venture of the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, the Kenya Forestry Research Institute, and the World Agroforestry Centre. Calliandra calothyrsus was released to farmers in 1995 and was followed by Leucaena trichandra, mulberry (Morus alba), and Sesbania sesban. Farmers produce seedlings of calliandra and trichandra in nurseries; mulberry is planted using cuttings. Farmers plant the shrubs in hedges along field and farm boundaries, on contour bunds, and intercropped with Napier grass. Within 1 year after planting, shrubs are ready to be pruned for feeding livestock. Most farmers cut them at a height of about 1m to ensure that they do not shade the adjacent crops (Franzel et al., 2003).
Citation
Franzel, Steven; Wambugu, C.; Stewart, J.; Cordero, J.; and Sande, B. D., "Fodder Shrubs for Improving Incomes of Dairy Farmers in the East African Highlands" (2023). IGC Proceedings (1993-2023). 239.
https://uknowledge.uky.edu/igc/20/themeA/239
Included in
Agricultural Science Commons, Agronomy and Crop Sciences Commons, Plant Biology Commons, Plant Pathology Commons, Soil Science Commons, Weed Science Commons
Fodder Shrubs for Improving Incomes of Dairy Farmers in the East African Highlands
Smallholder dairying is an important enterprise in the highlands of E Africa. Farm sizes average 1-2ha and zero-grazing, cut-and-carry systems predominate. Inadequate protein reduces milk production and forces many farmers to spend scarce cash on commercial dairy meal supplements. In 1991, on-farm trials on fodder shrubs were started in Embu District as a collaborative venture of the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, the Kenya Forestry Research Institute, and the World Agroforestry Centre. Calliandra calothyrsus was released to farmers in 1995 and was followed by Leucaena trichandra, mulberry (Morus alba), and Sesbania sesban. Farmers produce seedlings of calliandra and trichandra in nurseries; mulberry is planted using cuttings. Farmers plant the shrubs in hedges along field and farm boundaries, on contour bunds, and intercropped with Napier grass. Within 1 year after planting, shrubs are ready to be pruned for feeding livestock. Most farmers cut them at a height of about 1m to ensure that they do not shade the adjacent crops (Franzel et al., 2003).