Abstract:
The aim of the first part of this research was to investigate the agricultural
information sources and strategies for disseminating agricultural research findings to
farmers in Iringa District, Tanzania. The second part reports on management aspects
related to indigenous agro-biodiversity practices, focusing on sources, acquisitions,
sharing and constraints in managing indigenous knowledge related to agro biodiversity practices among local communities in Masasi and Nachingwea districts
in Tanzania. A total of 90 farmers were interviewed in Iringa district and 230 heads
of households using self-administered questionnaire, 16 key informants (village
leaders), 4 indigenous knowledge intermediaries (extension and forest officers) and
80 participants from Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) in Masasi and Nachingwea
districts. The statistical Package for Service Solutions (SPSS) software and
Spreadsheet were used as instruments to analyse the findings. Results from the first
part of the study indicate that radios, church leaders, village leaders and seminars are
the main channels of information used by extension officers to disseminate
agricultural information to farmers. With regard to strategies the study revealed that,
the use of religious leaders and government officials; use of primary school teachers
and pupils; non-political interference; repackaging and packaging of technical
information reports; deployment of extension officers in rural areas; use of
community-based organisations and the establishment of agricultural information
boards were the main effective strategies for disseminating agricultural research
information to farmers. It is therefore, concluded from the first part of the study, that
radio, church leaders, seminars, Newspapers, brochures and fliers should be
intensively used to disseminate agricultural information among farmers so as to raise
productivity in their farms. The study suggests that, there is a need to use other
disseminators such as influential people, religious leaders, political leaders, primary
school teachers and pupils to disseminate such information in addition to repackaging
of agricultural research findings to tailor it to the farmers’ needs. Results from the
second part of the study indicates that farmers rely heavily on tacit knowledge as
opposed to recorded knowledge. The study concluded that farmers create new
knowledge through face-to-face and group interactions, folklore, carvings and
initiation rites and that IK is largely transferred through oral tradition and
demonstrations and is preserved in human minds. The study recommends that KM
practices on management of agro-biodiversity should be the responsibility of
communities, village authorities, public and private sectors and that the government
and private agro-biodiversity actors should foster KM practices on management of
agro-biodiversity by engaging communities in the identification, mapping,
dissemination and preservation of IK and should conduct user studies to determine
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areas for intervention. These will help local communities to sustain their farming
systems and hence ensure their livelihoods.