El Batán, Mexico
January 2007
Source: CIMMYT E-News, vol
4 no.
1, January 2007
http://www.cimmyt.org/english/wps/news/2007/jan/africanfarmers.htm
New project will enhance and
expand the delivery of drought tolerant maize to the most
vulnerable in Africa, giving farmers options, even with the
changing global climate.
A vital research program that has already had significant impact
on the lives of African farmers will accelerate its work for
their benefit, thanks to new funding from one of the world’s
most important philanthropic organizations, the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation. The research also marks the forging of a
strong, new partnership between the developing world’s premier
research organizations dedicated to improving the livelihoods of
farm families who rely on maize: the International Maize and
Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) and the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA).
The two centers will team with research partners in eleven of
Africa’s most maize-dependent and drought-affected countries.
When sub-Saharan Africa’s recurrent droughts ruin harvests,
lives and livelihoods are threatened, even destroyed. The
development, deployment and cultivation of drought tolerant
maize varieties is a highly relevant intervention to reduce
vulnerability, food insecurity and the damage to local markets
caused by food aid. Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is the only region
in the world where both the number and the proportion of
malnourished children is expected to increase over the next
decade. Over 60% of all people in the region depend on
agriculture for food and income. Most are members of very poor
families with smallholder, mixed farming systems in
drought-prone areas. They have little access to inputs, service
providers and produce markets, education and infrastructure, and
an average annual per capita income of only USD 165.
In more than half the countries of sub-Saharan Africa over 50%
of land devoted to cereals is planted with maize. Maize
production is strategically important for food security and the
socio-economic stability of countries and sub-regions. Over 650
million people in sub-Saharan Africa consume on average 43 kg of
maize per year, a 35% increase since 1960. It is also a crop
accessible to the poor in both rural and urban areas, who cannot
afford more expensive foods such as bread, milk or meat.
Unfortunately, droughts and uncertain rainfall in sub-Saharan
Africa have made the maize harvest more vulnerable and less
reliable. For more than two decades, CIMMYT, IITA, and a large
group of partners from national agricultural research programs,
extension services, small-scale seed companies, and
non-governmental organizations have worked to breed drought
tolerant maize and to get the seed into the hands of farmers who
need it most.
The new project aims to generate maize varieties which are much
hardier when drought hits. Doubling the yield of adapted maize
varieties under drought within 10 years is possible because of
the rich genetic diversity in maize and new scientific methods
that allow better use of this variability. New varieties of
drought tolerant maize will play a significant part in
mitigating the potentially disastrous consequences for the crop
that could result from global warming.
At the first meeting of the partnership, held near Naivasha,
Kenya in January, the group identified maize research stations
suited for controlled drought experiments in participating
countries and key target physiological traits for plant growth,
leaf transpiration, and metabolism relating to drought
tolerance. Other traits important to farmers (grain and protein
quality; resistance to important crop diseases, storage pests,
and the parasitic weed, Striga) were identified and will be
addressed in breeding efforts within both international and
national breeding programs. The project partners will explore
the use of advanced science tools (such as molecular markers and
doubled haploids) and their application to accelerate the
development of drought tolerant maize varieties.
Recognizing the lack of access to seed of improved varieties as
a major constraint for smallholder maize farmers in Africa,
project specialists agreed to identify and address bottlenecks
in individual countries’ varietal testing and certification
systems, through training, policy advocacy, testing for varietal
purity, and other forms of support. The project will also work
closely with and support diverse seed producers and local
stockists, and improve farmers’ access to relevant information
about improved varieties.
Speaking at a news conference in Nairobi to announce the
project, the Assistant Minister of Agriculture for Kenya, the
Hon. Hon. Patrick Muiruri, M.P. said, “Kenya is pleased to be
part of this very important research and we will provide the
necessary support through the Kenya Agricultural Research
Institute.”
CIMMYT and IITA will continue to use both participatory breeding
strategies and drought-stress screening, combined with the new
techniques of marker-assisted selection, to improve the
efficiency of breeding. The scientists will also analyze
bottlenecks in seed systems and identify high-priority areas for
future investments in poverty reduction. Finally, the work will
greatly expand partnerships with national agricultural research
systems, non-governmental organizations, seed companies, and
other development initiatives in the region to ensure positive
impacts for resource-poor farmers.
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