Drivers of maize yield variability at household level in northern Ghana and Malawi

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Date Issued

2023-06-27

Date Online

2023-07-03

Language

en

Review Status

Peer Review

Access Rights

Open Access Open Access

Usage Rights

CC-BY-4.0

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Citation

Gachoki, S. & Muthoni, F.K. (2023). Drivers of maize yield variability at household level in Northern Ghana and Malawi. Geocarto International, 38(1), 1-16.

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Abstract/Description

Maize is a staple food, but productivity has stagnated due to limited access to advanced farming methods and knowledge. To promote sustainable agriculture, understanding the factors affecting maize yield at the farm level is crucial. This study used panel data on maize yield and agronomic practices in Northern Ghana and Malawi from 2014 to 2020. Satellite-based environmental variables were extracted at household locations, and Random Forest modeling was used to identify factors influencing maize yield variability. The models performance was sub-par with low R2 values (∼0.1 and ∼0.24 for Northern Ghana and Malawi). Fertilizer and precipitation were the most important factors explaining maize yield variability. Spatial maps showed that Malawi’s maize yield can increase with more fertilizer, but rainfall is essential. In Northern Ghana, relying solely on fertilizer may not be enough to boost maize production.

Contributes to SDGs

SDG 1 - No poverty
SDG 2 - Zero hunger

Subjects

AGRONOMY; BIOMETRICS; FOOD SECURITY; MAIZE; PLANT BREEDING; PLANT PRODUCTION; SOIL FERTILITY
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Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
CGIAR Initiatives