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Title: | Analysis of Agroforestry Practices in Katsina State, Nigeria |
Authors: | Chukwujekwu, Okonkwo Marius |
Issue Date: | Nov-2010 |
Series/Report no.: | ;Pp.1-221 |
Abstract: | The study investigated agroforestry farming among some international organizations, Nigerian Government, Kastina State Government and farmers in Katsina State. The aim of the study was to provide a baseline information on agroforestry practices in Kastina State. The practices undertaken by these bodies include establishment of shelterbelt, windbreak and woodlots, others were reforestation/plantation establishment, trees on farmland, homegarden and street planting. These bodies reforested a total of 11,0832 hectares of land through agroforestry and aforestation practices. The study covered the three agroecological zones of the state, namely Sahel, Sudan and Guinea savanna zones. Farmers were selected from twenty seven villages, nine villages from each of the three agroecological zones, thus giving a sample size of 450 farmers. The data collected were summarized and presented as ratio/frequencies/percentages/propotions/tables and subsequently subjected to chi-square test to verify the observations made. Variables pertaining to the farmers and their farming activities were investigated. The study has revealed that (i) agroforestry is not widely practiced by farmers in Katsina State as only 23 percent of the sampled farmers practiced it. (ii) Farmers who practiced agroforestry were mainly male and largely within 30-39 age cohort. (iii) agrofrorestry farmers cultivated an area of 609 hectares representing a mean of 6.2 hectares. The predominant agroforestry system practiced was maintaining of multipurpose trees on crop land, windbreak and multipurpose woodlot. |
Description: | A Thesis in the DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY AND PLANNING,
Faculty of Environmental Sciences
Submitted to the School of Postgraduate Studies, University of Jos in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement for the Award of the DEGREE of DOCTOR of PHILOSOPHY in Environmental and Resource Planning of the University of Jos. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/189 |
Appears in Collections: | Faculty of Environmental Sciences
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