El Batán, Mexico
November, 2006
Source:
CIMMYT E-News, vol 3 no.
11, November 2006
A
CIMMYT scientist is working to see if instead of replacing
old varieties with “new and improved”, it is possible to combine
the best of the new while retaining the old.
In the village of Tumbadero, Mexico, adjacent to CIMMYT’s Agua
Fría maize research station, the farmers place a very high value
on their traditional varieties. The maize they grow has small
ears so it does not yield much. What makes each ear special is a
long husk that dwarfs it. The village is close to a major
transportation route and traders pay a premium for the husks,
which are used to wrap one of Mexico’s most famous foods, the
tamale. “We make more money selling the husks than we do selling
the grain” says Ruben López, a farmer in the village. But he and
the other villagers have a problem: storing the ears without
their husks is an open invitation to insects to feast on the
maize. With so little yield, saving every grain possible for
food is extremely important.
Less than a hundred kilometers from Tumbadero is another
village—Cañada Rica. It is well off the beaten track and far
from traders. Farmers like Eva Cruz care much more about the
cooking quality of the maize flour than they do about the husks,
which they cannot sell. Eva uses husks as kindling for the fire
on which she cooks tortillas each morning. “Our maize makes the
best tortillas,” she says. “They are thick and filling, much
better than ones you make with maize flour from the store.” But
Eva Cruz’s maize is not without problems either. Storage pests
attack her harvest regularly, just as they do the maize in
Tumbadero.
Clearly the traditional varieties grown by the farmers of these
two villages are very different and have been bred by them to
meet specific needs. Each variety is also well-adapted to its
local environment. Farmers have no desire to abandon those
traits, but also need maize that yields, stores, and tolerates
stress better than their traditional varieties. That conundrum
became a challenge for Dave Bergvinson, a CIMMYT entomologist
who specializes in maize pests. “What if, instead of breeding
whole new varieties on a mass scale, you gave the farmers
themselves a chance to breed their own?” asks Bergvinson. “You
take their best and combine it with our best and then let them
do the rest.” To test the idea, he is working with farmers in
isolated, economically disadvantaged regions in Mexico. He takes
seed from farmers to a CIMMYT research site, like the station at
Agua Fría, where he can cross it with CIMMYT maize that has the
characteristics missing in the farmers’ varieties. Each cross is
specific to a particular village or farmer. After one season of
crossing, Bergvinson selects the progeny that perform the best
and most closely match farmer preferences for husk, grain type,
adaptation, and other traits. Finally, he returns seed of the
improved local variety to the farmers. From then on each farmer
has what is basically his traditional variety, but with certain
improved characteristics.
According to Bergvinson, CIMMYT lacks the resources to carry out
such work on a global scale. “It’s not a mass, large-scale
solution,” says Bergvinson. “But it is a way of getting to the
small pockets of deep poverty and giving those farmers a
chance.” It also provides another way for breeders to get a true
sense of what end-users of breeding products—the farmer and
consumer—consider important.
The pilot project is only in it’s fourth season and there is
much analysis to be done, but farmers like Eva Cruz and Ruben
López have grown their new seed and can see the improvement.
They also see that the traits they value so much in their maze
have not been lost.
For more information, David Bergvinson (d.bergvinson@cgiar.org) |