Farm, household, and farmer characteristics associated with changes in management practices and technology adoption among dairy smallholders
Autor: | Michel A. Wattiaux, Carlos Manuel Arriaga-Jordán, Carlos Galdino Martínez-García, Sarah Janes Ugoretz |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Family Characteristics
Technology Multivariate analysis Variance (land use) Agriculture Investment (macroeconomics) Agricultural economics Dairying Milk Food Animals Sustainability Costs and Cost Analysis Survey data collection Animals Cluster Analysis Animal Science and Zoology Business Animal Husbandry Central Highlands Dairy farming Productivity Mexico |
Zdroj: | Tropical animal health and production. 47(2) |
ISSN: | 1573-7438 |
Popis: | This study explored whether technology adoption and changes in management practices were associated with farm structure, household, and farmer characteristics and to identify processes that may foster productivity and sustainability of small-scale dairy farming in the central highlands of Mexico. Factor analysis of survey data from 44 smallholders identified three factors—related to farm size, farmer’s engagement, and household structure—that explained 70 % of cumulative variance. The subsequent hierarchical cluster analysis yielded three clusters. Cluster 1 included the most senior farmers with fewest years of education but greatest years of experience. Cluster 2 included farmers who reported access to extension, cooperative services, and more management changes. Cluster 2 obtained 25 and 35 % more milk than farmers in clusters 1 and 3, respectively. Cluster 3 included the youngest farmers, with most years of education and greatest availability of family labor. Access to a network and membership in a community of peers appeared as important contributors to success. Smallholders gravitated towards easy to implement technologies that have immediate benefits. Nonusers of high investment technologies found them unaffordable because of cost, insufficient farm size, and lack of knowledge or reliable electricity. Multivariate analysis may be a useful tool in planning extension activities and organizing channels of communication to effectively target farmers with varying needs, constraints, and motivations for change and in identifying farmers who may exemplify models of change for others who manage farms that are structurally similar but performing at a lower level. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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