El Batán, Mexico
January 31, 2008
CIMMYT’s partnerships on maize in eastern Africa hark back
to the 1960s, when the center was launched. Formal networking
since that time with researchers and extension workers, policy
makers, non-government organizations, seed companies, millers,
and farmers have culminated in successful breeding and
dissemination teams and promising new varieties rated highly by
farmers. Awards to teams in Tanzania and Ethiopia recently
highlighted the value of these partnerships.
During a travel workshop, CIMMYT and national scientists
observing maize breeding and dissemination activities in
Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda jointly selected the
recipients of the two awards, one for the best regional
technology dissemination team, led by the Selian Agricultural
Research Institute (SARI), Tanzania, and one for the best
regional maize breeding team for drought tolerance: the
Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research (EIAR)-Melkassa
Research Centre.
“The awards recognize the products of long-term collaboration
and team-building in the region, oriented towards the rapid
development, release, and scaling-up of locally adapted, stress
tolerant, and nutritionally enhanced maize varieties,” says
Wilfred Mwangi, leader of the Drought Tolerant Maize for Africa
(DTMA) project, which was launched in 2006 and which sponsored
the awards. “We hope the awards will encourage result-oriented
team approaches, such as those we pursue in the DTMA project.”
Ethiopia’s outstanding breeders
Dr. Aberra Deressa, the Ethiopian State Minister of Agriculture
and Rural Development and Guest of Honor, presented the special
award to the Ethiopian Institute for Agricultural Research
(EIAR) team in Melkassa for work that resulted in the release of
five new drought tolerant maize varieties since 2000. In on-farm
and on-station tests for yield and agronomic performance at 14
moisture-stressed locations, the new varieties out-yielded
leading maize cultivars by more than 30%. Farmers particularly
preferred one variety, Melkassa-2, for its white seed and
intermediate maturity, so seed of the variety was multiplied on
farmers' fields and distributed to the community.
“The Melkassa team also produced and sold basic seed of the five
varieties to Ethiopian maize seed producers, including the
Ethiopian Seed Enterprise, which then produced certified seed,”
says Alpha Diallo, CIMMYT regional maize breeder who
collaborated with the Ethiopian team on the development and
identification of these varieties. “The varieties have since
been promoted through field demonstrations and field days.”
“We have enjoyed great support for capacity building from CIMMYT
over many years,” said Dr. Aberra Deressa. “We consider CIMMYT
to be part of our national maize program and recommend this
model for adoption by other partners.”
The miller’s tale: Better nutrition and more cash
The award-winning multidisciplinary team from Tanzania comprised
breeders, agronomists, socio-economists, seed producers
(including farmers), and millers, and was led by the Selian
Agricultural Research Institute (SARI) in Arusha. Maize flour in
eastern Africa is used mostly to make the starchy staple food
known as ugali, and maize provides the bulk of inhabitants’
energy and protein in Tanzania. Three new varieties for which
the Tanzanian research team received the Technology
Dissemination Award are quality protein maize (QPM) varieties,
which looks and performs like normal maize, but whose grain
provides higher levels of lysine and tryptophan—amino acids
essential for growth in humans and farm animals.
Tanzania’s promotion of QPM for milling is helping to increase
the demand for QPM seed among farmers. Two millers, Nyirefami
Limited and the Grain and Flour Enterprise, are producing QPM
ugali flour. They hope eventually to replace conventional maize
flour to satisfy the country’s growing appetite for QPM ugali
and improve its nutritional well-being. “The Dissemination Team
Award recognizes efforts that bring all the necessary players
together—from breeders to NGOs to seed companies, and even
millers, involving farmers along the way, to get the (QPM)
technology to consumers,” says Dennis Friesen, CIMMYT maize
agronomist for eastern Africa.
Farmers: From on-lookers to leaders
CIMMYT has supported partners in applying participatory
approaches to evaluate new cultivars systematically and
cost-effectively under resource-poor farmers’ conditions, as
well as giving farmers a voice in determining whether any maize
cultivar will become available on the market. In the case of the
three QPM varieties in Tanzania, farmers particularly liked one
for its superior yields, good tip cover, and greater resistance
to the regionally-serious disease, maize streak virus.
Dr. Jeremiah Haki, Tanzania’s Director of Research and Training,
Ministry of Agriculture, Food Security and Cooperatives, has
commended CIMMYT for promoting farmer participation. “The farmer
is often left out in both variety development and dissemination;
no wonder they do not find the resultant varieties as being
appropriate to them and worth adopting,” says Haki. “Through our
partnership with CIMMYT, seed companies, NGOs and farmer groups,
we have placed strong emphasis on working with farmers. The
result is good varieties which have a strong farmer acceptance.”
Support that enables research collaboration to lead to impact
in farmers’ fields
Research and development activities that enabled these teams to
succeed and bring new maize varieties to farmers have taken
place via multiple projects, most recently supported by agencies
including CIDA-Canada, the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD), the Rockefeller Foundation, BMZ-Germany, the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Howard G. Buffett
Foundation. This and other work in the region has been executed
by CIMMYT in collaboration with the Association for
Strengthening Agricultural Research in Eastern and Central
Africa (ASARECA), as well as public, private, NGO and CBO
partners, according to Friesen. “The projects are mutually
supportive,” he says. “They share complementary outputs and
activities integrated in a consolidated framework, to develop
and promote new varieties that tolerate drought and low soil
fertility, resist pests and diseases, and offer better
nutritional quality.”
And the final word
Isaka Mashauri from TanSeed, one of the recipients of the
Tanzania team award, calls the success of these partnerships “of
paramount importance.”
“Thank you very much for the award,” he says. “It greatly
excited and motivated us to register more new and better maize
varieties and hybrids in coming years, and to reach more farmers
with new maize technologies.”
For more information: Wilfred Mwangi, project leader, DTMA (w.mwangi@cgiar.org)
, or Dennis Friesen, maize agronomist (d.friesen@cgiar.org) |
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