On the Ground or in the Air?
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World Bank, Washington, DC
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Maintaining permanent coverage of the
soil using crop residues is an important and commonly
recommended practice in conservation agriculture. Measuring
this practice is an essential step in improving knowledge
about the adoption and impact of conservation agriculture.
Different data collection methods can be implemented to
capture the field level crop residue coverage for a given
plot, each with its own implications for the survey budget,
implementation speed, and respondent and interviewer burden.
This study tests six alternative methods of crop residue
coverage measurement among the same sample of rural
households in Ethiopia. The relative accuracy of these
methods is compared against a benchmark, the line-transect
method. The alternative methods compared against the
benchmark include: (i) interviewee (respondent) estimation;
(ii) enumerator estimation visiting the field; (iii)
interviewee with visual-aid without visiting the field; (iv)
enumerator with visual-aid visiting the field; (v) field
picture collected with a drone and analyzed with
image-processing methods; and (vi) satellite picture of the
field analyzed with remote sensing methods. Results of the
methodological experiment show that survey-based methods
tend to underestimate field residue cover. When quantitative
data on cover are needed, the best estimates are provided by
visual-aid protocols. For categorical analysis (such as
greater than 30 percent cover or not), visual-aid protocols
and remote sensing methods perform equally well. Among
survey-based methods, the strongest correlates of
measurement errors are total farm size, field size,
distance, and slope. The results deliver a ranking of
measurement options that can inform survey practitioners and researchers.
Palabras clave
agricultural survey, crop residue, mulch, remote sensing, NDTI, conservation
