Agroecology performance evaluation of farms in Kerala and Meghalaya
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Date
2026
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Department of Agricultural Extension Education, College of Agriculture, Vellayani
Abstract
The study entitled “Agroecology performance evaluation of farms in Kerala and
Meghalaya” was undertaken to assess the performance of agroecological farming
systems in selected regions of the two states. The objectives of the study were to
evaluate the agroecology performance of farms in Kerala and Meghalaya; to analyse
the elements of agroecology and various management practices followed by the farmers
and to delineate the constraints faced by farmers in adopting agroecological farming
systems.
The study was conducted in Wayanad district of Kerala and South West Garo
Hills district of Meghalaya, both characterized by high climatic vulnerability and a
significant presence of diverse farming systems. A multistage sampling method was
employed for the selection of study areas and respondents to ensure representativeness
and reduce sampling bias. A total of 80 farmers were selected for the study, with 40
farmers each from Kerala and Meghalaya. Primary data collection was collected
through Kobotoolbox, a digital platform, using a pre- tested semi-structured interview
schedule by conducting personal interview with the respondents.
The assessment of extreme climatic events in Sultanbathery and Panamaram
blocks of Wayanad highlights their high exposure to recurrent landslides and intense
rainfall, placing them in the high climate impact category with impact scores of 2.80
and 3.25, respectively. In contrast, Selsella in Meghalaya faces frequent floods and
hailstorms, categorized as medium impact with a score of 2.50. These findings
underscore the need for localized adaptation measures such as soil and water
conservation, slope stabilization in Kerala, and flood management and hail protection
in Meghalaya, alongside farmer training and integrated climate adaptation planning.
Using the ten dimensions of agroecology defined by TAPE such as Diversity,
Synergy, Efficiency, Recycling, Resilience, Knowledge Sharing, Human and Social
Values, Nutrition Culture, Circular Economy, and Responsible Governance, content
analysis was conducted to deeply understand farming practices. This approach helped
categorize and interpret farmers adoption patterns, strengths, and gaps across these key
agroecological elements.
The analysis identified fifty agroecological practice codes across ten dimensions
used to categorize farmers practices. In Kerala, most responses focused on Diversity,
Synergy and Efficiency, emphasizing diversification and resource optimization, while
Governance and Circular Economy received less attention. In Meghalaya, Diversity,
Recycling, and Human and Social Values were dominant, reflecting community-based
and traditional practices, although Governance and Circular Economy were also
limited. Overall, farmers prioritize on-farm ecological practices more than institutional
and governance-related dimensions.
Based on the identified codes and practices, bipartite network analysis revealed
distinct adoption patterns across the two states. Kerala farmers are central adopters of
agroecological practices like crop diversification, beekeeping, manure application,
water conservation, agroforestry, input exchange, and mixed cropping, relying mainly
on family labour and neighbour cooperation for knowledge sharing. In Meghalaya, a
more centralized network shows key farmers adopting biogas slurry use, water
recycling, group practice sharing, family labour, seasonal food traditions, seed saving,
climate adaptation, land optimization and mixed cropping, reflecting strong community
engagement and traditional practices.
An Agroecology Adoption Index (AAI) was developed from content analysis to
measure the intensity and diversity of agroecological practices across the three blocks.
The index showed Selsella with the highest adoption (68.00%), followed by
Sultanbathery (64.10%) and Panamaram (58.00%). Kerala’s blocks emphasized
efficiency and social cohesion, while Meghalaya demonstrated more holistic
engagement with agroecology. Key constraints were limited agroecology-supportive
policies and subsidies favoring synthetic inputs in Kerala, and climate variability and
governance issues in Meghalaya. Correlation analysis indicated significant similarity
between Sultanbathery and Panamaram, with Meghalaya exhibiting distinct regional
challenges. These results highlight the urgent need for targeted policies, climate
resilience measures, and stronger institutional support.
In conclusion, the study highlights that both Kerala and Meghalaya are
progressing towards agroecological sustainability through distinct pathways. Policies
promoting region-specific strategies to strengthen agroecological transitions, local
innovation networks and climate-resilient agricultural practices should be given
importance. Financial assistance through low-interest loans, transition grants, and
incentives for eco-friendly technologies could be streamlined to ease farmers shift
toward sustainable practices. Addressing these challenges will promote resilient,
equitable farming systems aligned with agroecology’s core principles.
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Keywords
Agricultural Extension Education
Citation
176816