Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Master of Science |
Title | Ethnomedicinal products used in banana production, management practices, farmers’ perception and efficacy in Masaka and Mpigi districts, Uganda |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://www.ruforum.org/sites/default/files/Bwogi Godfrey Vianney.pdf |
Abstract | Banana failure among smallholder farmers resulting from high incidence of banana weevils and other pests and diseases has resulted into a poverty trap for farmers, food insecurity and reduced economic growth among the banana producing communities. Use of ethnomedicinal products can offer alternative to farmers who cannot afford to buy the expensive synthetic agro-chemicals which are also known to be a health and environmental hazard. The study investigated the extent of farmers’ use; the farmers’ perceived effectiveness of ethnomedicinal product and weevils’, percentage coefficient of infestation in plantations where ethnomedicinal products are used and where they are not. Quantitative and qualitative experimental and social economic approaches were used. Results indicated that most farmers (50.4%) still rely on cultural practices to control banana pests and diseases; 30.6% use ethnomedicinal products and 19% that use synthetic pesticides. It was also established that women were more likely to use cultural practices and ethnomedicinal products on a subsistence level of production and men were more likely to use chemicals on commercial scale. Use of ethnomedicinal products increased with the level of education, although people with tertiary education tended not to use the products. |
» | Uganda - National Household Survey 2009-2010 |