The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR and World Agroforestry (ICRAF) joined forces in 2019, leveraging a combined 65 years’ experience in research on the role of forests and trees in solving critical global challenges.
Year
2016
Authors
Muthuri CMuthuri C
, Iiyama MIiyama M
, Mukuralinda AMukuralinda A
, Hadgu K MHadgu K M
, Betemariam EBetemariam E
, Kinuthia RKinuthia R
, Kiptot EKiptot E
, Luedeling E, Muriuki J KMuriuki J K
, Kindt RKindt R
, Kuria A WKuria A W
, Gyau AGyau A
, Mohan S, Gassner AGassner A
, Mowo JMowo J
, Sinclair FSinclair F
Catherine Muthuri is the Regional Coordinator for the Eastern and Southern Afric...
Kiros Meles Hadgu (PhD) is a Scientist and ICRAF Country Representative for Ethi...
Ermias Betemariam is a land health scientist with research interest in land...
Ruth Kinuthia joined World Agroforestry in 2012 under the Evergreen agriculture ...
Jonathan Muriuki has his career objective as pursuit of research and development...
Roeland Kindt is a senior ecologist at the World Agroforestry Centre’s Tree Prod...
Amos is a research leader in Market, Institutions and Production Economics. He h...
Anja joined the World Agroforestry Centre in 2010, leading the Research Methods ...
Jeremias Gasper Mowo joined World Agroforestry in 2007 as Regional Coordinator f...
Fergus Sinclair leads the Centre’s research into the contribution that trees can...
In
- Dataset
Access
Region
The aim of this project is to enhance food security for resource-poor rural people in Eastern Africa through research that underpins national programmes to scale up the use of trees within farming systems in Ethiopia and Rwanda and then scale out successes to relevant agro-ecological zones in Uganda and Burundi. The specific objectives of the project are: To characterize target farming landscapes and systems, and develop tools for matching species and management options to sites and circumstances. To generalize predictions of impacts of tree species and management on crop productivity, water resources and nutrients at field, farm and landscape scales to inform scaling up to improve food security and reduce climate risk. To develop effective methods and enabling environments for scaling up and out the adoption of trees on farms. To develop databases and tools for monitoring and evaluation of the impact of scaling up and out the adoption of trees on farms. To enhance capacity and connectivity of national partner institutions (including farmer groups) in developing and promoting locally appropriate options for adoption of farm trees.












