Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’

At first glance, the village of Zèko in southern Benin is like most other villages in the region. Farmers grow two main crops: maize and cassava. Families are poor, mostly surviving on less than US$ 2 a day, a seemingly typical subsistence existence. But when a Bioversity International research team...

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Autor principal: Bioversity International
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105101
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author Bioversity International
author_browse Bioversity International
author_facet Bioversity International
author_sort Bioversity International
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description At first glance, the village of Zèko in southern Benin is like most other villages in the region. Farmers grow two main crops: maize and cassava. Families are poor, mostly surviving on less than US$ 2 a day, a seemingly typical subsistence existence. But when a Bioversity International research team began asking very specific questions, based on its diversity-focused site-evaluation methodology, it found that the farming and family situations were not at all what they seemed on the surface. Not only was the idea of subsistence farming overestimated, but it turned out that 70% of what the women in the village ate was procured at the market, not self-produced. Those two main crops were supplemented by dozens of other species, indicating a surprising level of crop diversity and also market initiative – because much of the diversity was produced for income as well as family consumption. Now, thanks to the methodology that highlights this village’s situation in terms of what crops the families grow, consume, buy, sell or trade, international development partners will have better understanding through this new tool to determine how to help villagers optimize diversity – both in their diets and in the markets.
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spelling CGSpace1051012025-11-05T08:01:08Z Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’ Bioversity International cassava crops diversification At first glance, the village of Zèko in southern Benin is like most other villages in the region. Farmers grow two main crops: maize and cassava. Families are poor, mostly surviving on less than US$ 2 a day, a seemingly typical subsistence existence. But when a Bioversity International research team began asking very specific questions, based on its diversity-focused site-evaluation methodology, it found that the farming and family situations were not at all what they seemed on the surface. Not only was the idea of subsistence farming overestimated, but it turned out that 70% of what the women in the village ate was procured at the market, not self-produced. Those two main crops were supplemented by dozens of other species, indicating a surprising level of crop diversity and also market initiative – because much of the diversity was produced for income as well as family consumption. Now, thanks to the methodology that highlights this village’s situation in terms of what crops the families grow, consume, buy, sell or trade, international development partners will have better understanding through this new tool to determine how to help villagers optimize diversity – both in their diets and in the markets. 2013 2019-10-15T15:44:40Z 2019-10-15T15:44:40Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105101 en Open Access application/pdf Bioversity International (2013) Showing diversity counts with custom methodology. n. 2 p. ISBN: 978-92-9043-952-3
spellingShingle cassava
crops
diversification
Bioversity International
Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title_full Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title_fullStr Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title_full_unstemmed Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title_short Showing diversity counts with custom methodology: Bioversity International’s ‘Tale of the tail’
title_sort showing diversity counts with custom methodology bioversity international s tale of the tail
topic cassava
crops
diversification
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/105101
work_keys_str_mv AT bioversityinternational showingdiversitycountswithcustommethodologybioversityinternationalstaleofthetail