Links between Farmers’ Socio-demographics and Adoption of Soil Conservation Technologies in Hilly Terrains of Nandi County, Kenya

Joseph Kipkorir Cheruiyot *

School of Agriculture and Biotechnology, University of Kabianga, Kenya.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Smallholder farms in Kenya continue to suffer from crop-productivity declines due to loss of soil quality as a result of soil erosion among other factors. Low adoption of soil conservation technologies persists in spite of previous interventions. This study was conducted to investigate links between farmers’ socio-demographic factors and the adoption of soil conservation technologies. The study adopted a descriptive cross-sectional survey design. Purposive and multi-stage random sampling techniques were used to select a sample of 150 farmers from six catchment areas of the hilly terrain of Tinderet in Nandi County, Kenya. A total of 138 participants were accessed. Questionnaires administered by enumerators were used to collect data. Data was analysed to generate descriptive statistics. Kendall-Stuart Tau-c and Goodman-Kruskal’s gamma were used to estimate correlations between socio-demographic factors and adoption. Age, Gender, duration of residence and farm size were not significantly associated with adoption (P > 0.05).Education levels, household size, level of awareness and income were positively associated with adoption (Gamma =.359, P = .034), (Gamma = .229, P = .088), (Gamma = .485, P = .000) and (Gamma = .282, P = .042) respectively. It is recommended that stakeholders address soil erosion problems through farmers’ capacity-building, particularly for low-income farmers.

Keywords: Soil fertility, land productivity, soil erosion, land degradation, socioeconomics, adoption


How to Cite

Cheruiyot, Joseph Kipkorir. 2020. “Links Between Farmers’ Socio-Demographics and Adoption of Soil Conservation Technologies in Hilly Terrains of Nandi County, Kenya”. Journal of Agriculture and Ecology Research International 21 (5):9-21. https://doi.org/10.9734/jaeri/2020/v21i530143.

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