Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2020
Authors
Habtamu AlemAbstract
The study aimed to extend the static concepts of multiproduct technical efficiency and determinants into a dynamic setting within the input distance function framework. The existing literature in performance analysis of the dairy farms in Norway based on static modelling and thus ignores the inter-temporal nature of production decisions. The empirical application focused on the farm-level analysis of the Norwegian dairy sector for 2000- 2018. The dynamic efficiency allows analysing the performance of dairy farms in regards of inter-temporal optimization of the investment behaviour. The analysis shows that the static model efficiency study in the previous studies underestimate the performance of the dairy farms. The marginal effects experience positively correlated with dairy farm technical efficiency whereas copped subsidy and asset debt ratio negatively correlated to the performance of the dairy farm.
Authors
Steen Magnussen Ronald E. McRoberts Johannes Breidenbach Thomas Nord-Larsen Göran Ståhl Lutz Fehrmann Sebastian SchnellAbstract
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Authors
Barbara Łaska-Zieja Damian Marcinkowski Wojciech Golimowski Gniewko Niedbała Ewelina WojciechowskaAbstract
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Agricultural practices to improve yields in small‐scale farms in Africa usually focus on improving growing conditions for the crops by applying fertilizers, irrigation, and/or pesticides. This may, however, have limited effect on yield if the availability of effective pollinators is too low. In this study, we established an experiment to test whether soil fertility, soil moisture, and/or pollination was limiting watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) yields in Northern Tanzania. We subjected the experimental field to common farming practices while we treated selected plants with extrafertilizer applications, increased irrigation and/or extra pollination in a three‐way factorial experiment. One week before harvest, we assessed yield from each plant, quantified as the number of mature fruits and their weights. We also assessed fruit shape since this may affect the market price. For the first fruit ripening on each plant, we also assessed sugar content (brix) and flesh color as measures of fruit quality for human consumption. Extra pollination significantly increased the probability of a plant producing a second fruit of a size the farmer could sell at the market, and also the fruit sugar content, whereas additional fertilizer applications or increased irrigation did not improve yields. In addition, we did not find significant effects of increased fertilizer or watering on fruit sugar, weight, or color. We concluded that, insufficient pollination is limiting watermelon yields in our experiment and we suggest that this may be a common situation in sub‐Saharan Africa. It is therefore critically important that small‐scale farmers understand the role of pollinators and understand their importance for agricultural production. Agricultural policies to improve yields in developing countries should therefore also include measures to improve pollination services by giving education and advisory services to farmers on how to develop pollinator‐friendly habitats in agricultural landscapes.
Authors
Cecilia E. Müller Astrid JohansenAbstract
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Authors
Grete StokstadAbstract
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Authors
Simon Jakobsson Joachim Paul Töpper Marianne Evju Erik Framstad Anders Lyngstad Bård Pedersen Hanne Sickel Anne Sverdrup-Thygeson Vigdis Vandvik Liv Guri Velle Per Arild Aarrestad Signe NybøAbstract
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.