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Combining Vegetables and Livestock in Cambodian Farming

About the Horticulture Innovation Lab

Led by ΢Ƶ and funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, the is part of the U.S. government’s global hunger and food security initiative called Feed the Future.  Researchers from throughout the United States participate in lab projects in Asia, Africa and Central America, to help farmers better grow nutritious fruits and vegetables.

In addition to this , the program has two other research projects in Cambodia — one looking at and one led by ΢Ƶ researchers focused on .

New research supported by the at ΢Ƶ aims to help farmers in Cambodia better integrate growing vegetables, raising livestock and maintaining healthy soil — all in the same place.

“By understanding the interactions between horticulture and livestock systems, we can help farmers make better use of agricultural inputs such as fertilizer and labor, which will help improve a farmer’s bottom line,” says , which is funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development.

“Systems thinking” is critical to making a real-world impact in global food security, according to , project leader and assistant professor at Kansas State University. It’s also required to understand . 

“Too often overlooked is that systems piece, the very fact that these things — crops and livestock, soil health and human health — play together. It’s not always enough to study a single piece of the pie,” Vipham says.

Combining conservation agriculture with swine and cattle

As part of the U.S. government’s global hunger and food security initiative, the Horticulture Innovation Lab already has research in Cambodia helping farmers better grow vegetables using . These improve soil health by combining continuous mulch, reduced tillage and diverse crop rotation.

“When we visited the farms our researchers have been working with in Cambodia, they already had animals there. Figuring out how to best utilize their livestock is just smart,” McGuire says.

Because the Cambodians were sensitive to using pesticides and other synthetic supplements, they were interested in substituting manure and other livestock byproducts, she reports.

Manure vs. mulch

Cambodian male farmer overseeing a young Cambodian college student mixing vegetable matter together
A host farmer oversees Channaty Ngang, right, a student from the University of Battambang, while she chops up morning glory for the farm's pigs.  (Erin McGuire/΢Ƶ)

With farmers near — the city closest to Cambodia’s famous — the team’s research will focus on integrating pigs with crops. One question the team will investigate is whether the parts of a vegetable plant that don’t become human food might be used to better feed pigs instead of being used as mulch.

The Horticulture Innovation Lab team will investigate whether pig manure might take the place of that mulch and the various trade-offs in using manure vs. mulch.

Farther west, near the city of Battambang, farmers are more interested in cattle. Vipham explained that in this region cattle are often valued as a type of income safety net. If a farmer suddenly needs some money, then the family can sell their cow. Research trials will likely focus on ways to maintain a cow’s physical condition (and potentially its selling price) with crops grown for livestock feed, alongside the farmers’ usual vegetable crops for sale and human consumption.

Advancing science while building local capacity

Three men in an orchard talking
From left, technician Pok Panha shows Gabe Sampson and Zachary Stewart with Kansas State University a field trial area at the new Center of Excellence on Sustainable Agricultural Intensification and Nutrition technology park in Siem Reap. (Jessie Vipham/Kansas State University)

The American team will be working with Cambodian scientists from the and the . The international group met recently in Cambodia to explore research sites and make plans to move forward. Vipham is encouraged to see the scientists come together as a team.

“It’s one thing to make plans and write a grant proposal,” Vipham says. “It’s a totally different thing when you have your livestock scientists and horticulturalists and soil scientists on the ground, looking at the same thing, and you can see their wheels start to turn.”

One of the Cambodian researchers, Lyda Hok, is director of the , which includes five new “technology parks” where the team’s research will take place.

“With the five technology parks, we will be able to share this useful information and recommendations to more farmers throughout the country,” Hok says.

“Visiting these technology parks, you can feel how they are modeled after the American agricultural extension system to help move new agricultural practices from scientists to farmers,” ΢Ƶ’ McGuire says. “By partnering with the Cambodian scientists for this research, we are also helping to support those efforts to rebuild Cambodia’s agricultural extension system.”

Helping farmers make their own best decisions

Hok and his colleagues at the Royal University of Agriculture have been working with U.S. university researchers connected to the Horticulture Innovation Lab since 2010. He says these partnerships are an important part of the problem-solving process.

“We have the same goal, to extend successful agricultural technologies to benefit more farmers, especially smallholder farmers,” he says.

Ultimately the team will distill the research findings into several documents aimed at helping farmers consider new practices, understand the trade-offs and make informed decisions about managing their farms.

“It all comes back to: How do we help make these decisions easier for farmers? They already have so much they’re dealing with,” Vipham says.

“Increasing productivity is important for generating income, but if I’m a farmer, what does that mean for conserving my resources? What does that mean for my ability to feed my children?”

Brenda Dawson is the communications coordinator for the Horticulture Innovation Lab, where she writes about ways fruits, vegetables and agricultural science can change people’s lives around the world.

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