Use of geospatial techniques in selecting suitable areas for rearing dairy cattle, goats and honey bees in Baringo county.
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Date
2020Author
Chepkilot, Peterson K
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Food insecurity has been a major issue all over developing nations including Kenya
especially in rural areas where lives are solely dependent on agriculture. This situation
has been worsening with the climatic conditions which have been constantly changing
negatively. This study intended to analyse and map suitable areas for rearing dairy
cattle, goats and honey bees in Baringo County. A spatial model for each the value
chains was designed and developed to achieve the objective.
The study area has experienced a lack of food year in year out during the dry season
and has led to hunger killing several people. Contrary to this the area is known to have
great potential in the production of honey, goat meat, and cow milk within different
spatial extent of the area.
The study entailed data collection, data manipulation and analysis which involved
spatial overlay of several factor maps among others to generate the overall suitability
maps for each of the value chains. This research aimed to identify and delineate the
land that can best support dairy cattle, goat, and honey bees, using the GIS-based MultiCriteria Evaluation technique and Remote Sensing.
It is possible to increase livestock keeping and apiculture ability in an appropriate area
by identifying the important factors and ranking suitability of the land. These factors
were therefore considered for each of the value chains. These criteria included: food,
water, land use, temperature, humidity, biological hazards, the potential for
mechanization, slope, rainfall regime, agrarian culture, market index and root rating for
forage growth.
The final output of this project are land suitability maps for dairy cattle, goats and honey
bees. According to the study, 95% of Baringo county is moderately suitable to highly
suitable for goat rearing, 65% suitable for honeybees and 41% suitable for dairy
keeping. Notably, the results from the experiment were validated by actual findings on
the ground. The findings of this research therefore should be considered by the farmers
and the stakeholders in order to improve food security in the area.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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