Publication: Control strategies of Parthenium hysterophorus L. on smallholder farms in Kenya

Parthenium hysterophorus L. (Asteraceae) is an invasive alien weed with detrimental effects on agricultural production, biodiversity, human and animal health, threatening rural livelihoods in Asia and Africa. The problem emerged recently in the Kenyan Rift Valley, where it began to affect the landholdings of both agro-pastoralists and crop farmers. These vulnerable smallholders depend heavily on natural resources for their livelihoods. In this study, we assessed the severity of parthenium invasion and farmers’ management responses using a sample of 530 agro-pastoralists in Baringo County, Kenya, in 2019. We hypothesize that the implementation of existing management strategies depends on the state of parthenium invasion and household socio-economic characteristics.

The prevalence and severity of parthenium invasion differed greatly among field plots. To control weeds, farmers resort to either hand weeding, the use of synthetic herbicides, or intensive tillage, sometimes in combination with mulching. A multivariate probit regression model shows that households’ characteristics determine the type of control strategies used as well as their complementarity and substitutability. Hand weeding is the most common option, adopted by almost 40% of farmers. The use of agrochemicals or soil-based control strategies appears to be related to knowledge and information characteristics such as access to extension services, membership in organizations, and the educational level of household heads. While hand weeding and the use of synthetic herbicides depict significant substitutability, the latter strategy is limited to a few larger farms with market-oriented production. As parthenium invasion continues, policies need to improve farmer awareness and access to knowledge to enable pro-poor and environmentally sustainable control of parthenium on smallholder farms.

Tabe-Ojong, MP, Alvarez, M, Ihli, H, Becker, M, & Heckelei, T 2021, ‘Action on Invasive Species: Control Strategies of Parthenium hysterophorus L. on Smallholder Farms in Kenya’, Environmental Management, DOI.

More CRC News

cover for a web post

CRC-TRR 228 Future Rural Africa Awarded Funding for a Third Project Phase (2026-2029) by German Research Foundation (DFG)

We are thrilled to announce that the German Research Foundation (DFG) has awarded the Collaborative Research Centre TRR 228 Future Rural Africa funding for another ...
Read More »
image shows a field in eastern Africa

New Study Reveals How Tanzanian Farmers Navigate Conflicting Sustainability Worlds

Saymore Ngonidzashe Kativu (Project B05 “Science Futures”) argues that smallholder farmers in Mbeya, Tanzania navigate conflicting market-based and eco-cultural ideas of sustainability by creating hybrid farming ...
Read More »
the image shows an industrial area

New Publication: How State Strategies in Special Economic Zones Shape Labor Outcomes in Ethiopia and Zambia

Carolina Kiesel and Peter Dannenberg (Project C01 “Future in Chains”) analyse how different state strategies for developing Special Economic Zones (SEZs) shape labour outcomes. Comparing ...
Read More »
a map showing the location of nyerere dam in Tanzania

Reviving a Ghost Dam: The Politics and Promise of Tanzania’s Rufiji River Basin

In this newly published article, Emma Minja and Detlef Müller-Mahn (Project C03 Green Futures) explore the century-long history and politics of the Stiegler’s Gorge (now ...
Read More »
book cover of a publciation about foot and mouth disease

Rethinking Foot-and-Mouth Disease: How Botswana’s History Challenges Colonial Views of Animal Health

This publication examines how understandings of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) in Botswana during the 1960s–70s were shaped by colonial and postcolonial contexts, showing how local veterinary ...
Read More »
Scroll to Top