he small amount of on-farm research that has been carried out with fodder trees in Africa has mainly involved exotic species selected by researchers rather than farmers. In this study, farmers who had participated in a pre-planting survey chose, during feedback meetings, seedlings of indigenous, ...
Enlace original:
https://cgspace.cgiar.org/handle/10568/35318
Roothaert, Ralph L.
,
Franzel, Steven
,
Kiura, M.
,
[On-farm evaluation of fodder trees and shrubs preferred by farmers in central Kenya]
,
On-farm evaluation of fodder trees and shrubs preferred by farmers in central Kenya