Eyes in the Sky, Boots on the Ground
Understanding the determinants of agricultural productivity requires accurate measurement of crop output and yield. In smallholder production systems across low- and middle-income countries, crop yields have traditionally been assessed based on farmer-reported production and land areas in household...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the determinants of
agricultural productivity requires accurate measurement of
crop output and yield. In smallholder production systems
across low- and middle-income countries, crop yields have
traditionally been assessed based on farmer-reported
production and land areas in household and farm surveys,
occasionally by objective crop cuts for a sub-section of a
farmer’s plot, and rarely using full-plot harvests. In
parallel, satellite data continue to improve in terms of
spatial, temporal, and spectral resolution needed to discern
performance on smallholder plots. This study evaluates
ground and satellite-based approaches to estimating crop
yields and yield responsiveness to inputs, using data on
maize from Eastern Uganda. Using unique, simultaneous ground
data on yields based on farmer reporting, sub-plot crop
cutting, and full-plot harvests across hundreds of
smallholder plots, we document large discrepancies among the
ground-based measures, particularly among yields based on
farmer-reporting versus sub-plot or full-plot crop cutting.
Compared to yield measures based on either farmer-reporting
or sub-plot crop cutting, satellite-based yield measures
explain as much or more variation in yields based on
(gold-standard) full-plot crop cuts. Further, estimates of
the association between maize yield and various production
factors (e.g., fertilizer, soil quality) are similar across
crop cut- and satellite-based yield measures, with the use
of the latter at times leading to more significant results
due to larger sample sizes. Overall, the results suggest a
substantial role for satellite-based yield estimation in
measuring and understanding agricultural productivity in the
developing world. |
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