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Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia

Received: 7 November 2023    Accepted: 28 November 2023    Published: 23 January 2024
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Abstract

This activity, Pre-extension Demonstration and Evaluation of Improved Rice Technology was carried out in the Ilu-Harar district, Jagan PA of the then Ilu-Ababora zone of Western Oromia on four (4) farmers and on 10*10 m2 plots of land for each. In addition; this activity was to address and achieve the following objectives; to demonstrate & evaluate improved rice technologies with FRGs, to create awareness of the importance of the commodity, to make better linkage with target beneficiaries and stakeholders, and finally to collect feedback on the performance of rice production technologies. Consequently, the activity was conducted for one year using two varieties; Chawaka and NERICA-1 as a standard check. Accordingly; the Chawaka variety beat the standard check in all of the traits except the time of maturity which takes a longer period than the standard check. To this end farm mean yield performance of the Chawaka and the standard check; NERICA-1 were 45.57 qt/ha and 31.30 qt/ha; respectively, and on average Chawaka had a yield advantage of 45.59 % over NERICA-1 and this implies that Chawaka had higher yield advantage than NERICA-1. Moreover; when comparing the potential of the varieties acquired up on release in terms of the potential gap existing between the performance of the technology/ variety on the research station versus demonstration yield on farmers’ fields there exists even similarity on the Chawaka variety but 7.2 qt/ha of yield reduction on NERICA-1 variety. Further; the statistical ANOVA table and mean yield comparison (t-test) results of on-farm yield performances showed that there is a highly significant difference at (p˂0.05) between the varieties demonstrated. Furthermore; in terms of profitability, the financial analysis result of the study also showed that using the Chawaka variety can make it more profitable than NERICA-1. Eventually; therefore, as the variety has met the intended criteria of the farmers and was selected as the best variety the pre-scaling up activity should follow next for a greater number of farmers and on a wider area in the coming years.

Published in American Journal of Life Sciences (Volume 12, Issue 1)
DOI 10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13
Page(s) 16-23
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Rice Demonstration, Participatory Variety Evaluation and Selection, Yield Advantage, Chawaka and Nerica 1

References
[1] Dawit Alemu 2015 Rice in Ethiopia: Progress in Production Increase and Success Factors 6th CARD General Meeting Ethiopia institute of agriculture research.
[2] Dhaka B. L., Meena B. S. and Suwalka R. L. 2010. Popularization of Improved Maize Production Technology through Frontline Demonstrations in South-Eastern Rajasthan. Journal of AgriSci, 1(1): 39-42 (2010).
[3] Evans, L. T. & Fischer, R. A. 1999. Yield potential: its definition, measurement, and significance. Crop. Sci. 39, 1544-1551.
[4] European Cooperative for Rural Development (EUCORD), 2012. Rice sector development in East Africa, a desk study prepared for the Common fund for commodities.
[5] Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). 2006. Production Year Book. Available: http://faostat.fao.org/faostat/form. collection= production. Crops. Primary and Domain=Production & servlet=1 & has bulk=0 & version=ext & language=E. [Visited March 2, 2007).
[6] Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). 2013. Rice Market Monitor. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Volume XVI-Issue No. 1.
[7] Halos-Kim, L., 2015. Value-addition, agro-enterprises, partnerships & market access. African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, 15(5).
[8] Mohammed, A. B., Wudil, A. H., Daneji, M. I., Jibrin J. M., Hussaini, M. A. and Mohammed I. B..2016. Economics of On-Farm Sorghum-Legume Strip Cropping System in Kano state. Nigeria. Journal of Agriculture and Sustainability, Volume 7, November 1.
[9] Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MoARD). 2010. National Rice Research and Development Strategy of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 48 pp.
[10] Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MoARD). 2011. Towards implementation of the National Rice Research and Development Strategy of Ethiopia. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
[11] Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MoARD). 2013. Ministry of agriculture and rural development crop development department, crop variety register. Issue No. 15.
[12] Poehlman, J. M. and Sleper, D. A., 1995. Breeding Field Crops, 4th ed. Oxford and IBM pub. Co. New Delhi, India. 494p.
[13] Seck, P. A., Toure, A. A., Coulibaly, J. Y., Diagne. A. and Wopereis, M. C. S. 2013. Impact of rice research on income, poverty and food security in Africa: an ex-ante analysis. In: Wopereis, M. C. S., Johnson, D. E., Ahmadi, N., Tollens, E., and Jalloh, A. (Eds.), Realizing Africa’s Rice Promise. CAB International, Wallingford, UK. pp. 24-33.
[14] Thakur AK, Rath S, Patil DU, Kumar A (2011). Effects on rice plant morphology and physiology of water and associated management practices of the system of rice intensification and their implications for crop performance. Paddy Water Environ. 9: 13–24.
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    Abebe, G., Wolteji, E. (2024). Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia. American Journal of Life Sciences, 12(1), 16-23. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13

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    ACS Style

    Abebe, G.; Wolteji, E. Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia. Am. J. Life Sci. 2024, 12(1), 16-23. doi: 10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13

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    AMA Style

    Abebe G, Wolteji E. Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia. Am J Life Sci. 2024;12(1):16-23. doi: 10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13,
      author = {Galmesa Abebe and Effa Wolteji},
      title = {Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia},
      journal = {American Journal of Life Sciences},
      volume = {12},
      number = {1},
      pages = {16-23},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajls.20241201.13},
      abstract = {This activity, Pre-extension Demonstration and Evaluation of Improved Rice Technology was carried out in the Ilu-Harar district, Jagan PA of the then Ilu-Ababora zone of Western Oromia on four (4) farmers and on 10*10 m2 plots of land for each. In addition; this activity was to address and achieve the following objectives; to demonstrate & evaluate improved rice technologies with FRGs, to create awareness of the importance of the commodity, to make better linkage with target beneficiaries and stakeholders, and finally to collect feedback on the performance of rice production technologies. Consequently, the activity was conducted for one year using two varieties; Chawaka and NERICA-1 as a standard check. Accordingly; the Chawaka variety beat the standard check in all of the traits except the time of maturity which takes a longer period than the standard check. To this end farm mean yield performance of the Chawaka and the standard check; NERICA-1 were 45.57 qt/ha and 31.30 qt/ha; respectively, and on average Chawaka had a yield advantage of 45.59 % over NERICA-1 and this implies that Chawaka had higher yield advantage than NERICA-1. Moreover; when comparing the potential of the varieties acquired up on release in terms of the potential gap existing between the performance of the technology/ variety on the research station versus demonstration yield on farmers’ fields there exists even similarity on the Chawaka variety but 7.2 qt/ha of yield reduction on NERICA-1 variety. Further; the statistical ANOVA table and mean yield comparison (t-test) results of on-farm yield performances showed that there is a highly significant difference at (p˂0.05) between the varieties demonstrated. Furthermore; in terms of profitability, the financial analysis result of the study also showed that using the Chawaka variety can make it more profitable than NERICA-1. Eventually; therefore, as the variety has met the intended criteria of the farmers and was selected as the best variety the pre-scaling up activity should follow next for a greater number of farmers and on a wider area in the coming years.
    },
     year = {2024}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Availing Technology Options for Small-Scale Farmers: The Case of Pre-Extension Demonstration of Improved Rice Technology at Ilu-Harar District of Western Oromia, Ethiopia
    AU  - Galmesa Abebe
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    JO  - American Journal of Life Sciences
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    SN  - 2328-5737
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajls.20241201.13
    AB  - This activity, Pre-extension Demonstration and Evaluation of Improved Rice Technology was carried out in the Ilu-Harar district, Jagan PA of the then Ilu-Ababora zone of Western Oromia on four (4) farmers and on 10*10 m2 plots of land for each. In addition; this activity was to address and achieve the following objectives; to demonstrate & evaluate improved rice technologies with FRGs, to create awareness of the importance of the commodity, to make better linkage with target beneficiaries and stakeholders, and finally to collect feedback on the performance of rice production technologies. Consequently, the activity was conducted for one year using two varieties; Chawaka and NERICA-1 as a standard check. Accordingly; the Chawaka variety beat the standard check in all of the traits except the time of maturity which takes a longer period than the standard check. To this end farm mean yield performance of the Chawaka and the standard check; NERICA-1 were 45.57 qt/ha and 31.30 qt/ha; respectively, and on average Chawaka had a yield advantage of 45.59 % over NERICA-1 and this implies that Chawaka had higher yield advantage than NERICA-1. Moreover; when comparing the potential of the varieties acquired up on release in terms of the potential gap existing between the performance of the technology/ variety on the research station versus demonstration yield on farmers’ fields there exists even similarity on the Chawaka variety but 7.2 qt/ha of yield reduction on NERICA-1 variety. Further; the statistical ANOVA table and mean yield comparison (t-test) results of on-farm yield performances showed that there is a highly significant difference at (p˂0.05) between the varieties demonstrated. Furthermore; in terms of profitability, the financial analysis result of the study also showed that using the Chawaka variety can make it more profitable than NERICA-1. Eventually; therefore, as the variety has met the intended criteria of the farmers and was selected as the best variety the pre-scaling up activity should follow next for a greater number of farmers and on a wider area in the coming years.
    
    VL  - 12
    IS  - 1
    ER  - 

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Author Information
  • Oromia Agricultural Research Institute, Bako Agricultural Research Center, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

  • Oromia Agricultural Research Institute, Bako Agricultural Research Center, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

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