Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana

Among the critical challenges affecting crop production and agricultural productivity in most developing countries are declining soil fertility and the incidence of crop pests and diseases. Hence, there have been efforts by scientists and policy-makers especially in sub-Saharan Africa to promote the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Benjamin Tetteh Anang, Jennifer Amesimeku, James Fearon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-05-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010033
id doaj-7ba14e18b4f3432fbb6147fae72ea7ce
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7ba14e18b4f3432fbb6147fae72ea7ce2021-06-03T14:44:55ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402021-05-0175e06900Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of GhanaBenjamin Tetteh Anang0Jennifer Amesimeku1James Fearon2Corresponding author.; Department of Agricultural and Food Economics, University for Development Studies, Tamale, GhanaDepartment of Agricultural and Food Economics, University for Development Studies, Tamale, GhanaDepartment of Agricultural and Food Economics, University for Development Studies, Tamale, GhanaAmong the critical challenges affecting crop production and agricultural productivity in most developing countries are declining soil fertility and the incidence of crop pests and diseases. Hence, there have been efforts by scientists and policy-makers especially in sub-Saharan Africa to promote the uptake of agronomic and production practices that address these challenges. This study, therefore, aimed at investigating the drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility (CPSF) management practices among soybean farmers in rural Ghana. The management practices investigated included application of chemical fertilizers, biofertilizers (inoculants) and herbicides. The study was motivated by the critical roles that adoption of CPSF management practices play in promoting agricultural productivity. Multivariate probit (MVP) and censored Tobit modelling were used to estimate adoption and intensity of adoption, respectively. Adoption of rhizobium inoculant and chemical fertilizer, as well as adoption of rhizobium inoculant and herbicide application, were mutually exclusive, while adoption of chemical fertilizer and herbicide were found to be complementary. Adoption intensity was higher for female farmers and increased with age, herd size, farm capital and farm size. Furthermore, institutional factors were more influential in the case of inoculant and herbicide adoption while for fertilizer adoption, farmer characteristics were the influential factors. The study recommends that policies to promote adoption should take into account the interdependence among the technologies. Also, there is the need to target farmers who cannot afford the cost of inputs with support in the form of input subsidies to reduce partial adoption.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010033AdoptionCrop protectionSoil fertility managementCount data modelSmallholder farmersGhana
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Benjamin Tetteh Anang
Jennifer Amesimeku
James Fearon
spellingShingle Benjamin Tetteh Anang
Jennifer Amesimeku
James Fearon
Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
Heliyon
Adoption
Crop protection
Soil fertility management
Count data model
Smallholder farmers
Ghana
author_facet Benjamin Tetteh Anang
Jennifer Amesimeku
James Fearon
author_sort Benjamin Tetteh Anang
title Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
title_short Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
title_full Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
title_fullStr Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in Tolon district of Ghana
title_sort drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility management practices among smallholder soybean farmers in tolon district of ghana
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Among the critical challenges affecting crop production and agricultural productivity in most developing countries are declining soil fertility and the incidence of crop pests and diseases. Hence, there have been efforts by scientists and policy-makers especially in sub-Saharan Africa to promote the uptake of agronomic and production practices that address these challenges. This study, therefore, aimed at investigating the drivers of adoption of crop protection and soil fertility (CPSF) management practices among soybean farmers in rural Ghana. The management practices investigated included application of chemical fertilizers, biofertilizers (inoculants) and herbicides. The study was motivated by the critical roles that adoption of CPSF management practices play in promoting agricultural productivity. Multivariate probit (MVP) and censored Tobit modelling were used to estimate adoption and intensity of adoption, respectively. Adoption of rhizobium inoculant and chemical fertilizer, as well as adoption of rhizobium inoculant and herbicide application, were mutually exclusive, while adoption of chemical fertilizer and herbicide were found to be complementary. Adoption intensity was higher for female farmers and increased with age, herd size, farm capital and farm size. Furthermore, institutional factors were more influential in the case of inoculant and herbicide adoption while for fertilizer adoption, farmer characteristics were the influential factors. The study recommends that policies to promote adoption should take into account the interdependence among the technologies. Also, there is the need to target farmers who cannot afford the cost of inputs with support in the form of input subsidies to reduce partial adoption.
topic Adoption
Crop protection
Soil fertility management
Count data model
Smallholder farmers
Ghana
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844021010033
work_keys_str_mv AT benjamintettehanang driversofadoptionofcropprotectionandsoilfertilitymanagementpracticesamongsmallholdersoybeanfarmersintolondistrictofghana
AT jenniferamesimeku driversofadoptionofcropprotectionandsoilfertilitymanagementpracticesamongsmallholdersoybeanfarmersintolondistrictofghana
AT jamesfearon driversofadoptionofcropprotectionandsoilfertilitymanagementpracticesamongsmallholdersoybeanfarmersintolondistrictofghana
_version_ 1721399245335953408