Abstract
The article identified socio-economic and ecological factors influencing the practices of indigenous knowledge systems (IKS) in soil fertility conservation amidst farmers in Ekiti State Nigeria. It specifically identified the various IKS practices used in conserving soil fertility; identified the reasons why the practices were used; determined the benefits of IKS utilisation in soil fertility conservation; and analysed the socio-economic and ecological factors influencing the use of IKS. The study was conducted using a multi-stage sampling technique to select 250 farmers in 20 communities drawn from the five administrative divisions of the State namely: Ekiti North; Ekiti West; Ekiti East; Ekiti South; and Ekiti Central. Pretested structured and unstructured interview schedules were used to collect information from the respondents. Frequency distribution percentages mean and standard deviation were used to describe the data. Correlation and regression analyses were the inferential statistics used. The result of the inferential statistics showed that at P < 0.01 and 0.05 levels of significance there was a positive and significant correlation between IKS utilisation and socio-economic factors such as age (r = 0.260) family size (r = 0.289) religion (r = 0.132) farm size (r = 0.180); and income level (r = 0.252). Also there existed a positive and strong association between IKS utilisation and association membership (t = 1.769) and farming scope (t = 3.741). Conversely negative but significant relationship existed between IKS utilisation and soil (r = -0.125) vegetation (r = -0.409) and education level (r = -0.177). (authors)
Paper version not known (
Free)
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have