Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania

In our research, we have studied smallholder farmers in degraded farming systems in Northwest Tanzania and have compared them with farm households who were trained in sustainable land management by a local Farmer Field School. Both groups of farmers were affected by severe environmental degradation...

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Main Authors: Anika Reetsch, Gerald Kapp, Karl-Heinz Feger, Kai Schwärzel, Christina Dornack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-11-01
Series:Proceedings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/16
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spelling doaj-7f3a8e6933a64f988e538b37f5638f482020-11-25T01:41:44ZengMDPI AGProceedings2504-39002019-11-013011610.3390/proceedings2019030016proceedings2019030016Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From TanzaniaAnika Reetsch0Gerald Kapp1Karl-Heinz Feger2Kai Schwärzel3Christina Dornack4UNU-FLORES, Technische Universität Dresden, 01067 Dresden, GermanyInstitute of International Forestry, Forest Products, Technische Universität Dresden, 01069 Dresden, GermanyInstitute of Soil Science, Site Ecology, Technische Universität Dresden, 01069 Dresden, GermanyInstitute for Integrated Management of Material Fluxes and Resources, United Nations University, Tokyo 150-8925, JapanInstitute of Waste Management, Circular Economy, Technische Universität, 01069 Dresden, GermanyIn our research, we have studied smallholder farmers in degraded farming systems in Northwest Tanzania and have compared them with farm households who were trained in sustainable land management by a local Farmer Field School. Both groups of farmers were affected by severe environmental degradation and poor soil fertility, but trained farmers have transformed degraded farmland into fertile, multi-functional land use systems. In this presentation, we discuss the successes and failures of both groups of farmers and draw conclusions towards restoring degraded land use systems. Farmers without training cannot restore degraded farmland with traditional agricultural management alone and fail to produce enough food, fodder, biofuel, and timber to support the whole family. The reasons for their failure are manifold and include environmental and socio-economic dimensions, e.g., poor management of soils and farm waste, lacking adaptation to climate change, traditional gender roles, and the loss of knowledge and labour in HIV/AIDS-affected households. In comparison, trained farmers change nutrient management by using advanced composting techniques. They also cultivate a greater variety of crops and trees, introduce organic pesticide management, ease manure collection, construct vegetable gardens that are watered by drip irrigation in the dry season, change gender roles and communication structures. The main differences between both groups of farmers occur in food security, health status, education level, marketing, income generation, prosperity, and gender-related responsibilities. However, the full potential of organic farm waste being used as soil fertiliser is not exhausted, as human excreta is not integrated into nutrient management. Farm households who are most vulnerable to food security, e.g., female-headed and HIV/AIDS-affected households, need to get support in strengthening their socio-economic base before transforming the farm management. In conclusion, local Farmer Field Schools significantly contribute to restoring land degradation. To transform smallholder agriculture in Tanzania, a joint partnership with local governmental organisations could help farmers to escape poverty and become food secure (SDG 1 and SDG 2). Similar approaches could support smallholder farmers in East Africa, where they contribute to three-fourth of the agricultural production.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/16land restorationmultifunctionalityagricultural intensificationsmallholder farmerstropical highlands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anika Reetsch
Gerald Kapp
Karl-Heinz Feger
Kai Schwärzel
Christina Dornack
spellingShingle Anika Reetsch
Gerald Kapp
Karl-Heinz Feger
Kai Schwärzel
Christina Dornack
Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
Proceedings
land restoration
multifunctionality
agricultural intensification
smallholder farmers
tropical highlands
author_facet Anika Reetsch
Gerald Kapp
Karl-Heinz Feger
Kai Schwärzel
Christina Dornack
author_sort Anika Reetsch
title Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
title_short Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
title_full Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
title_fullStr Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Transforming Degraded Smallholder Farmland into Multi-Functional Land Use Systems: A Case Study From Tanzania
title_sort transforming degraded smallholder farmland into multi-functional land use systems: a case study from tanzania
publisher MDPI AG
series Proceedings
issn 2504-3900
publishDate 2019-11-01
description In our research, we have studied smallholder farmers in degraded farming systems in Northwest Tanzania and have compared them with farm households who were trained in sustainable land management by a local Farmer Field School. Both groups of farmers were affected by severe environmental degradation and poor soil fertility, but trained farmers have transformed degraded farmland into fertile, multi-functional land use systems. In this presentation, we discuss the successes and failures of both groups of farmers and draw conclusions towards restoring degraded land use systems. Farmers without training cannot restore degraded farmland with traditional agricultural management alone and fail to produce enough food, fodder, biofuel, and timber to support the whole family. The reasons for their failure are manifold and include environmental and socio-economic dimensions, e.g., poor management of soils and farm waste, lacking adaptation to climate change, traditional gender roles, and the loss of knowledge and labour in HIV/AIDS-affected households. In comparison, trained farmers change nutrient management by using advanced composting techniques. They also cultivate a greater variety of crops and trees, introduce organic pesticide management, ease manure collection, construct vegetable gardens that are watered by drip irrigation in the dry season, change gender roles and communication structures. The main differences between both groups of farmers occur in food security, health status, education level, marketing, income generation, prosperity, and gender-related responsibilities. However, the full potential of organic farm waste being used as soil fertiliser is not exhausted, as human excreta is not integrated into nutrient management. Farm households who are most vulnerable to food security, e.g., female-headed and HIV/AIDS-affected households, need to get support in strengthening their socio-economic base before transforming the farm management. In conclusion, local Farmer Field Schools significantly contribute to restoring land degradation. To transform smallholder agriculture in Tanzania, a joint partnership with local governmental organisations could help farmers to escape poverty and become food secure (SDG 1 and SDG 2). Similar approaches could support smallholder farmers in East Africa, where they contribute to three-fourth of the agricultural production.
topic land restoration
multifunctionality
agricultural intensification
smallholder farmers
tropical highlands
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/16
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