Enhancing healthy ecosystems in northern Ghana through eco‑friendly farm‑based practices: insights from irrigation scheme‑types
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BMC Ecology
Abstract
Background: Farming practices vary from farmer to farmer and from place to place depending on a number of
factors including the agroclimatic condition, infrastructure (e.g. irrigation facilities) and management mechanisms
(private versus state management). These together affect the functioning and sustainability of the ecosystems. For
the sustainability of ecosystems, farmers need to employ ecosystem-based farm practices. This paper examines the
ecosystem-based farm management practices (EBFMPs) in private and state-managed irrigation schemes. It also
analyses the drivers of farmers’ willingness to pay for EBFMPs sustainability. The study employed mixed methods
design, using both qualitative and quantitative techniques of data collection through key informant interviews, focus
group discussions and semi-structured questionnaires administered to 300 households. The various EBFMPs adopted
by farmers were examined and descriptively presented. The Chi-square automatic interaction detector (CHAID) and
multiple linear regression were used to assess the predictors of farmers’ willingness to pay for EBFMPs to enhance the
health of agroecosystems. Compost application, conservative tilling, conservation of vegetation, mulching, crop rotation,
intercropping with legumes, efficient drainage systems and bunding were the EBFMPs captured in this paper.
Results: Farmers in privately-managed irrigation schemes (PIS) more often apply EBFMPs compared with those in
state-managed irrigation schemes (SIS). The paper also found that farmers’ willingness to pay to sustain EBFMPs for
healthy ecosystems is significantly determined by the type of irrigation scheme they cultivate in (that is, PIS or SIS),
their level of education, marital status and perception of soil fertility.
Conclusions: Policy makers, implementers, and other stakeholders need to consider the capacity building of irrigation
farmers, especially those in SIS in northern Ghana by educating them on agricultural production and ecosystem
nexus to enhance the level of usage and willingness to pay for EBFMPs sustainability.
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Research Article