rangelands
AGROVOC URI: http://aims.fao.org/aos/agrovoc/c_6448
Sustainable intensification of crop-livestock system through manure management in eastern and western Africa: lessons learned and emerging research approaches
Sustainable intensification of crop-livestock systems in Northern Ghana: Report on 2012 activities
Sustainable management of globally significant endemic ruminant livestock in West Africa (PROGEBE): Summary for decision making—The Gambia
Sustainable production systems programme: current activities and future opportunities
The main objective of ILRI's Sustainable Production Systems Programme is to improve human welfare through the development of more productive and Sustainable crop-livestock sytems in developing countries. The programmes' focus is on market-oriented smallholder crop-livestock systems. In order to improve the productivity and sustainability of these systems, biological, environmental and socio-economic constraints have to be overcome. Therefore, opportunities for changing the systems in a sustainable manner have to be carefully identified and chosen.
Sustainable management of endemic ruminant livestock of West Africa and their environment
Sustainable Rangeland Management Project, Tanzania
Sustainable smallholder goat production and commercialization in India
Sustainable smallholder goat production and commercialization in semi-arid regions of Mozambique
Sustainable use and conservation of Vitex doniana Sweet: unlocking the propagation ability using stem cuttings
One of the major constraints for domesticating widely used wild tree resources by local communities is the lack of adequate propagation techniques. In the case of Vitex doniana, seed propagation has usually been reported difficult and vegetative regeneration is rarely explored. To understand how stem cutting size or hormone application affect the regeneration and early growth ability in that species we used two categories of cutting diameter (1cmVitex doniana to reduce the pressure on wild tree population in Benin.
Sustaining landscapes: Improving land and water management
Sustaining inclusive collective action that links across economic and ecological scales in upper watersheds
The Sustaining inclusive Collective Action that Links across Economic and Ecological Scales in upper watersheds (Scales) project fits mainly in People and Water in Catchments Theme (Theme
2) of the CPWF. Its goal is to contribute to poverty alleviation in the upper watersheds of the
tropics through improved collective action for watershed resource management within and across
social-spatial scales. Scales worked though an integrated program of collaborative action
research, development, and capacity building in key catchments of the Nile and Andes basins, as