Household Tree Planting in Tigrai, Northern Ethiopia: Tree Species, Purposes, and Determinants

Trees have multiple purposes in rural Ethiopia, providing significant economic and ecological benefits. Planting trees supplies rural households with wood products for their own consumption, as well for sale, and decreases soil degradation. In this paper, we used cross-sectional household-level data to analyze the determinants of household tree planting and explored the most important tree attributes or purpose(s) that enhance the propensity to plant trees. We set up a sample selection framework that simultaneously takes into account the two decisions of tree growers (whether or not to plant tree and how many) to analyze the determinants of tree planting. We used logistic regression to analyze the most important tree attributes contributing to households’ tree-planting decisions. We found that land size, age, gender, tenure security, education, exogenous income, and agro-ecology increased both the propensity to plant trees and the amount of tree planting, while increased livestock holding impacted both decisions negatively. Our findings also suggested that households consider a number of attributes in making decision to plant trees. These results can be used by policymakers to promote tree planting in the study area by strengthening tenure security and considering households’ selection of specific tree species for their attributes (criteria).

[1]  R. Chambers,et al.  Participation in the Farmer-Owned Reserve Program: A Discrete Choice Model , 1983 .

[2]  T. Pinckney,et al.  Smallholder Wood Production and Population Pressure in East Africa: Evidence of an Environmental Kuznets Curve? , 1995 .

[3]  A. Mekonnen Rural Energy and Afforestation: Case studies from Ethiopia , 1998 .

[4]  J. Nibbering Tree planting on deforested farmlands, Sewu Hills, Java, Indonesia: Impact of economic and institutional changes , 1999, Agroforestry Systems.

[5]  P. Dewees Trees on Farms in Malawi: Private Investment, Public Policy and Farmer Choice , 1995 .

[6]  G. Amacher,et al.  Tree planting in Tigray, Ethiopia: the importance of human disease and water microdams , 2004, Agroforestry Systems.

[7]  Gunnar Köhlin,et al.  Woodfuels, livelihoods, and policy interventions: changing perspectives , 2006 .

[8]  G. Köhlin,et al.  Spatial Variability and Disincentives to Harvest: Deforestation and Fuelwood Collection in South Asia , 2001, Land Economics.

[9]  S. Scherr Economic factors in farmer adoption of agroforestry: Patterns observed in Western Kenya , 1995 .

[10]  J. Pender,et al.  The role of trees for sustainable management of less-favored lands: the case of eucalyptus in Ethiopia , 2003 .

[11]  J. Hansen,et al.  Tree planting under customary tenure systems in malawi: impacts of marriage and inheritance patterns , 2005 .

[12]  A. Filius Economic aspects of agroforestry , 1982, Agroforestry Systems.

[13]  J. Suh,et al.  Socio-economic factors affecting smallholder tree planting and management intentions in Leyte Province, Philippines , 2004, Small-scale Forest Economics, Management and Policy.

[14]  M. Koike,et al.  Understanding why farmers plant trees in the homestead agroforestry in Bangladesh , 2000, Agroforestry Systems.

[15]  J. Pender,et al.  Strategies for sustainable land management in the East African highlands , 2006 .

[16]  Z. Gebreegziabher,et al.  Household fuel consumption and resource use in rural-urban Ethiopia , 2007 .

[17]  Gunnar Köhlin,et al.  Fuelwood, forests and community management – evidence from household studies , 2008, Environment and Development Economics.

[18]  Marno Verbeek,et al.  A Guide to Modern Econometrics , 2000 .

[19]  Priscilla A. Cooke,et al.  The effect of environmental good scarcity on own-farm labor allocation: the case of agricultural households in rural Nepal , 1998, Environment and Development Economics.

[20]  Marcel Fafchamps,et al.  Peasant Household Behaviour with Missing Markets: Some Paradoxes Explained , 1991 .

[21]  “ No Tree , No Bee – No Honey , No Money ” : The Management of Resources and Marginalisation in Beekeeping Societies of South West Ethiopia , 2004 .

[22]  S. Kidanu,et al.  Using Eucalyptus for Soil & Water Conservation on the highland Vertisols of Ethiopia , 2004 .

[23]  A. Mekonnen Rural household biomass fuel production and consumption in Ethiopia: a case study. , 1999 .

[24]  B. Shiferaw,et al.  Tree planting for poverty reduction in less-favoured areas of the Ethiopian highlands , 2003, Small-scale Forest Economics, Management and Policy.

[25]  B. Gebremedhin,et al.  Woodlot devolution in northern Ethiopia: opportunities for empowerment, smallholder income diversification, and sustainable land management. , 2003 .

[26]  R. Fichtl,et al.  Honeybee flora of Ethiopia. , 1994 .

[27]  Ranjan S. Karippai,et al.  Adopting improved box hive in Atsbi Wemberta District of eastern zone, Tigray region: determinants and financial benefits , 2008 .

[28]  David R. Lee,et al.  Farmer participation in reforestation incentive programs in Costa Rica , 1996, Agroforestry Systems.

[29]  J. Heckman Sample selection bias as a specification error , 1979 .

[30]  B. Gebremedhin,et al.  Community natural resource management: the case of woodlots in Northern Ethiopia , 2003, Environment and Development Economics.