| Literature DB >> 27478730 |
Elisha Kwaku Denkyirah1, Elvis Dartey Okoffo2, Derick Taylor Adu1, Ahmed Abdul Aziz3, Amoako Ofori2, Elijah Kofi Denkyirah4.
Abstract
Pesticides are a significant component of the modern agricultural technology that has been widely adopted across the globe to control pests, diseases, weeds and other plant pathogens, in an effort to reduce or eliminate yield losses and maintain high product quality. Although pesticides are said to be toxic and exposes farmers to risk due to the hazardous effects of these chemicals, pesticide use among cocoa farmers in Ghana is still high. Furthermore, cocoa farmers do not apply pesticide on their cocoa farms at the recommended frequency of application. In view of this, the study assessed the factors influencing cocoa farmers' decision to use pesticide and frequency of pesticide application. A total of 240 cocoa farmers from six cocoa growing communities in the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana were selected for the study using the multi-stage sampling technique. The Probit and Tobit regression models were used to estimate factors influencing farmers' decision to use pesticide and frequency of pesticide application, respectively. Results of the study revealed that the use of pesticide is still high among farmers in the Region and that cocoa farmers do not follow the Ghana Cocoa Board recommended frequency of pesticide application. In addition, cocoa farmers in the study area were found to be using both Ghana Cocoa Board approved/recommended and unapproved pesticides for cocoa production. Gender, age, educational level, years of farming experience, access to extension service, availability of agrochemical shop and access to credit significantly influenced farmers' decision to use pesticides. Also, educational level, years of farming experience, membership of farmer based organisation, access to extension service, access to credit and cocoa income significantly influenced frequency of pesticide application. Since access to extension service is one key factor that reduces pesticide use and frequency of application among cocoa farmers, it is recommended that policies by government and non-governmental organisations should be aimed at mobilizing resources towards the expansion of extension education. In addition, extension service should target younger farmers as well as provide information on alternative pest control methods in order to reduce pesticide use among cocoa farmers. Furthermore, extension service/agents should target cocoa farmers with less years of farming experience and encourage cocoa farmers to join farmer based organisations in order to decrease frequency of pesticide application.Entities:
Keywords: Berekum Municipality; Cocoa farmers; Decision to use pesticide; Frequency of pesticide application; Ghana; Pesticide; Probit and Tobit regression models
Year: 2016 PMID: 27478730 PMCID: PMC4949184 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-2779-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Description, measurements and A-priori expectation of variables
| Variable | Measurement | A-priori expectation |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | 1 if male, 0 otherwise | + |
| Age | Years | + |
| Educational level | 1 = No formal education, 2 = Primary, 3 = JHS, 4 = SHS, 5 = Tertiary | − |
| Years of farming experience | Years | − |
| Membership of FBO | 1 = yes, 0 = otherwise | +/− |
| Access to extension service | 1 = member, 0 = otherwise | +/− |
| Availability of agrochemical shop | 1 = available, 0 = otherwise | + |
| Access to credit | 1 = yes, 0 = otherwise | + |
| Cocoa income | Ghana cedi | + |
Demographic characteristics of respondents
Source: Field work, 2015
| Variable | Description | Frequency | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 198 | 82.5 |
| Female | 42 | 17.5 | |
| Age | 20–39 | 49 | 20.4 |
| 40–59 | 145 | 60.4 | |
| Above 60 | 46 | 19.2 | |
| Marital status | Single | 198 | 17.5 |
| Married | 42 | 82.5 | |
| Educational level | No formal education | 36 | 15.0 |
| Primary/JHS | 118 | 49.2 | |
| Middle/SHS | 81 | 33.8 | |
| Tertiary | 5 | 2.0 | |
| Years of farming experience in cocoa | 5–10 | 14 | 5.8 |
| 11–15 | 39 | 16.3 | |
| 16–20 | 43 | 17.9 | |
| Above 20 | 144 | 60.0 |
Insecticides and fungicides approved by Ghana COCOBOD for use by cocoa farmers in Ghana
Source: Extracted from Adjinah and Opoku (2010) and Afrane and Ntiamoah (2011)
| Trade name | Active ingredient | Main use | Chemical hazardous class (WHO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cocostar | Bifenthrin + Pirimiphos-methyl | Insecticides | II |
| Carbamult | Promecarb | Insecticides | |
| Akatemaster | Bifenthrin | Insecticides | II |
| Confidor | Imidacloprid | Insecticides | II |
| Fungikill | Cupric hydroxide + Metalaxyl | Fungicides | III |
| Metalm | Cuprous oxide + Metalaxyl | Fungicides | III |
| Champion | Cuprous hydroxide | Fungicides | |
| Kocide | Cupric hydroxide | Fungicides | III |
| Nordox | Cuprous oxide | Fungicides | |
| Funguran | Cuprous hydroxide | Fungicides | |
| Actara | Thiamethoxam | Insecticides | III |
| Ridomil | Metalaxyl cuprous oxide | Fungicides | III |
II = moderately hazardous; III = slightly hazardous; (WHO 2005)
Commonly used unapproved pesticides by cocoa farmers in the study area
Source: Field work, 2015
| Trade name | Active ingredient | Main use | Chemical hazardous class (WHO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sunpyrifos | Chlorpyrifos-Ethyl | Broad spectrum | II |
| Lamtox | Lambda-Cyhalothrin | Insecticide | II |
| Okumakete | Thiamethoxam | Insecticide | III |
| Pyrethroids-Decis | Deltamethrin | Insecticide | II |
| Fastrack | Alpha-Cypermethrin | Insecticide | II |
| Polythrine | Cypermethrin | Insecticide | II |
| Dursban | Chlorpyrifos | Broad spectrum | II |
| Super 10 | Permethrin | Broad spectrum | II |
| Consider Supa | Imidacloprid | Broad spectrum | II |
| Kombat | Lambda-Cyhalothrin | Insecticide | II |
| Aceta-star | Methyl-thiophanate | Pesticide/fungicide | III |
| Topsin-M | Methyl-thiophanate | fungicide | III |
| Condifor | Imidacloprid | Insecticide | II |
| Thiodan | Endosulfan | Insecticide | II |
| Sumitox | Fenvalerate | Insecticide | II |
| Lambda-M | Lambda-Cyhalothrin | Insecticide | II |
| Akatesuro | Diazinon | Insecticide | II |
| Argine | Aldrin | I | |
| DDT | DDT | Insecticide | I |
| Sumico 200 EC | Fenvalerate | Broad spectrum | II |
| Confidence | Chlopyrifos/Lamda-cyhalothrin | Insecticide | II |
| Buffalo-Super | Acetamiprid/Chlorfenvinphos | Broad spectrum | I |
| Controller-Super | Lambda-Cyhalothrin | Broad spectrum | II |
I = extremely hazardous; II = moderately hazardous; III = slightly hazardous; (WHO 2005)
Probit result on the factors influencing pesticide use among cocoa farmers
Source: Author’s computation (2015)
| Variables | Coefficient | Robust Std. Err. | P value | Marginal effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 0.681 | 0.298 | 0.022** | 0.046 |
| Age | −0.097 | 0.022 | 0.000*** | −0.004 |
| Educational level | 0.371 | 0.146 | 0.011** | 0.014 |
| Farming experience | 0.115 | 0.016 | 0.000*** | 0.004 |
| Membership of FBO | 0.233 | 0.304 | 0.443 | 0.008 |
| Access to extension | −0.824 | 0.387 | 0.033** | −0.021 |
| Availability of agrochemical shop | −0.988 | 0.300 | 0.001*** | −0.061 |
| Access to credit | 0.758 | 0.309 | 0.014** | 0.044 |
| Cocoa income | 0.497 | 0.340 | 0.144 | 0.019 |
| Constant | −2.551 | 3.518 | 0.468 | – |
*** and ** represent 1 and 5 % significance level respectively
Tobit result on the frequency of pesticide application
Source: Author’s computation (2015)
| Variables | Coefficient | Robust Std. Err. | P value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | 0.458 | 0.605 | 0.450 |
| Age | 0.007 | 0.020 | 0.746 |
| Educational level | 0.661 | 0.169 | 0.000*** |
| Farming experience | −0.050 | 0.012 | 0.000*** |
| Membership of FBO | −0.657 | 0.277 | 0.019** |
| Access to extension service | −2.233 | 0.301 | 0.000*** |
| Availability of Agrochemical shop | −0.457 | 0.305 | 0.136 |
| Access to credit | −0.867 | 0.430 | 0.045** |
| Cocoa income | −1.093 | 0.322 | 0.001*** |
| Constant | 14.880 | 3.935 | 0.000 |
*** and ** represent 1 and 5 % significance level respectively