Economic assessment of losses due to fruit fly infestation in mango and the willingness to pay for an integrated pest management package in Embu district, Kenya
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Date
2012Author
Muchiri, Caroline M
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Mango production is a major form of income generation for Kenyan large and small-scale farmers.
However, it is confronted with the major threat of fruit fly infestation which causes reduction of
quality and quantity of marketable fruit resulting to considerable produce losses. New and cheaper
methods to reduce fruit fly infestation levels in mango production have been developed, but
farmers’ willingness to pay (WTP) for them is not known. First, this study was conducted in Embu
district, and it aimed to examine the magnitude of losses caused by fruit flies at the farm level via
rejections during harvest using descriptive analysis and seeks to determine farmer and farm-level
factors influencing the variation of these losses among mango producers using a simple robust
regression technique. Secondly, a survey based on contingent valuation was conducted to obtain the
maximum amount of money that mango farmers were willing to pay for an Integrated Pest
Management (IPM) fruit fly control package if it is released in the market. Using a logistic
regression model the study then investigated factors influencing the probability that farmers would
be willing to pay a pre-determined seasonal cost of KES 1100 per acre for the package. The model
was estimated using data collected from 240 mango growing farmers selected using multistage and
proportionate to size random sampling procedures. Results from the study indicate that the average
percentage loss due to fruit fly infestation via rejections at the farm was 24 percent, with some
farmers reporting higher losses of up to 60 percent. The results further showed that fruit fly related
mango losses increase with the area under mango cultivation and the farmer’s age while access to
information on pest control, annual income and orchard sanitation are associated with lower losses.
Results from the WTP analysis showed that 66 percent of respondents were willing to pay the cost
of KES 1100 per acre for the IPM fruit fly control package. The descriptive mean WTP among
farmers was found to be KES 1700 per acre implying a high potential for its adoption as it is higher
than the pre-determined seasonal cost. Farmers’ WTP for the package is positively influenced by a
host of factors; level of education, mango cropping system, household income, the magnitude of
fruit damaged by fruit fly, damage rating and expenditure for pest control using pesticides. Based on
the empirical results, the study derives policy implications in the design and implementation of
workable policies that support sustainable dissemination of IPM technologies if the expected high
demand and potential benefits to farmers are to be realized. A more systematic ex-post impact
assessment study should however be conducted after the release and adoption of the technology to
evaluate the performance of this intervention.
Citation
Msc - ThesisSponsorhip
University of NairobiPublisher
Department of Agricultural Economics, University of Nairobi, Kenya
Subject
Economic assessmentLosses
Fruit fly infestation
Mango
Willingness to pay
Integrated pest management package
Embu
Kenya
Description
Msc - Thesis