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Sustainable Intensification of Key Farming Systems in the Sudano-Sahelian Zone of West Africa N. Karbo, F. K. Avornyo, H. K. Dei, B. Alenyorege, E. Osafo, S. Konlan, A. Fall CSIR-ARI, UDS, ILRI
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ACTIVITIES/OUTPUTS Planning meeting and team formation Core team for coordination Regional teams for coordination Committee on planning for Regional workshop, training course Areas for protocol development identified
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Regional workshop on constraints and opportunities for intensification of integrated crop-livestock systems Proceedings Technologies tested/generated On-station False yam for guinea fowls (8 feed formulations) False yam fro pigs (9 feed formulations out of which two were promising)
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On-farm Feed supplementation under wet season management of small ruminants – 1 promising feed formulation Sorghum spent malt for guinea fowls (cheaper feed formulation) Best-bet technologies in milk hygiene and processing Appropriate pasteurization equipment Posters on milk hygiene, milk platform, salt wagashi, good wagashi, quesco blanco cheese and yoghurt
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Capacity building Training of implementers Improvement in understanding of crop- livestock systems Benefited from biometry training Training of farmers Sensitization on protocol Demonstration on feed formulation
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Training of students Demonstration on feed formulation Data collection Crop-livestock systems Protocol
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Dissemination Farmer field visits (75 men and 42 women) Feed millers’ visit to project site Community experience-sharing and learning (120 participants) Posters distributed (3,000)
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Challenges Harmonization gaps of the protocols due to limited information on socio-cultural settings Time and area to cover Managing in the absence of a project vehicle Support needed by farmers for technology/innovation uptake How to sustain the process/interventions – farmers are wondering if we will come back
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Lessons Team work contributed greatly to the achievements Regional teams required monitoring due to peculiarity of data collection - without which project might have failed
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Element of long term relationship, commitment and trust Wet season intervention is justified particularly for restrained animals Land is an issue for intensification - In UER where crops are failing diversifying into livestock production for integration with crops can improve livelihoods
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Opportunities Community members are more receptive and are organizing themselves into groups Some feed formulations were promising and this provides an opportunity for scaling up – development of feed market New partnerships formed present an opportunity for future collaborations (internal and external partners)
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Presence of milk groups presents an opportunity for the development of the dairy sector in northern Ghana Availability of synthesized knowledge for uptake – proceedings, reports Working as a consortium for future projects
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Thank you
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