Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique

Sweet potato breeders strive to breed varieties that address the productivity challenges farmers face in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, adoption of these varieties is low, partly attributed to limited attention to preferred attributes desired by the end users. This study sought to identify the k...

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Autores principales: Mayanja, Sarah, Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar, Ogwal, Martin, Makunde, Godwill, Naico, Abdul, Nakitto, Mariam, Ssali, Reuben, Andrade, Maria
Formato: Póster
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Potato Center 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136996
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author Mayanja, Sarah
Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar
Ogwal, Martin
Makunde, Godwill
Naico, Abdul
Nakitto, Mariam
Ssali, Reuben
Andrade, Maria
author_browse Andrade, Maria
Makunde, Godwill
Mayanja, Sarah
Naico, Abdul
Nakitto, Mariam
Ogwal, Martin
Ssali, Reuben
Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar
author_facet Mayanja, Sarah
Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar
Ogwal, Martin
Makunde, Godwill
Naico, Abdul
Nakitto, Mariam
Ssali, Reuben
Andrade, Maria
author_sort Mayanja, Sarah
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Sweet potato breeders strive to breed varieties that address the productivity challenges farmers face in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, adoption of these varieties is low, partly attributed to limited attention to preferred attributes desired by the end users. This study sought to identify the key traits preferred by eight women processors and 426 consumers (180 male, 246 female) in Manhiça, Marracuene and Maputo districts, Mozambique. Processing diagnostics and consumer studies evaluated four sweet potato varieties: two local (Lilas and N’santimuni) and two improved (Alisha and Irene). Data from processors were analyzed using content analysis and summary statistics, while consumer data were analyzed using the nine-point hedonic test for ‘overall liking’, ‘just about right’, and ‘check all that apply’ tests. Processors prioritized mealiness, sweet taste, not fibrous, good sweet potato smell, ease of peeling, easy to cook, and good appearance for the boiled root. N’santimuni was the most preferred variety for processing. Consumers preferred the N’santimuni and Lilas varieties because of their high dry matter, pleasant sweet potato smell, firmness in the hand, smoothness when eating and sweet taste. The Alisha and Irene varieties were the most penalized with low scores on sweetness, mealiness and firmness. Although varietal preferences between genders differed, the top four attributes were similar except for sweet taste (preferred by women) and softness (favored by men). Also, youth and more educated consumers disliked improved varieties more than adults and lower income consumers. Breeding programs can be enhanced by studies of biophysical and chemical parameters of sweet potato, which will quantify and enable incorporation of quality attributes such as mealiness.
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spelling CGSpace1369962025-11-06T14:12:41Z Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique Mayanja, Sarah Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar Ogwal, Martin Makunde, Godwill Naico, Abdul Nakitto, Mariam Ssali, Reuben Andrade, Maria gender agriculture research sweet potatoes plant breeding innovation adoption Sweet potato breeders strive to breed varieties that address the productivity challenges farmers face in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). However, adoption of these varieties is low, partly attributed to limited attention to preferred attributes desired by the end users. This study sought to identify the key traits preferred by eight women processors and 426 consumers (180 male, 246 female) in Manhiça, Marracuene and Maputo districts, Mozambique. Processing diagnostics and consumer studies evaluated four sweet potato varieties: two local (Lilas and N’santimuni) and two improved (Alisha and Irene). Data from processors were analyzed using content analysis and summary statistics, while consumer data were analyzed using the nine-point hedonic test for ‘overall liking’, ‘just about right’, and ‘check all that apply’ tests. Processors prioritized mealiness, sweet taste, not fibrous, good sweet potato smell, ease of peeling, easy to cook, and good appearance for the boiled root. N’santimuni was the most preferred variety for processing. Consumers preferred the N’santimuni and Lilas varieties because of their high dry matter, pleasant sweet potato smell, firmness in the hand, smoothness when eating and sweet taste. The Alisha and Irene varieties were the most penalized with low scores on sweetness, mealiness and firmness. Although varietal preferences between genders differed, the top four attributes were similar except for sweet taste (preferred by women) and softness (favored by men). Also, youth and more educated consumers disliked improved varieties more than adults and lower income consumers. Breeding programs can be enhanced by studies of biophysical and chemical parameters of sweet potato, which will quantify and enable incorporation of quality attributes such as mealiness. 2023-10-10 2024-01-04T12:46:43Z 2024-01-04T12:46:43Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136996 en Open Access application/pdf International Potato Center Mayanja, Sarah; Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar; Ogwal, Martin; Makunde, Godwill; Naico, Abdul; Nakitto, Mariam; Ssali, Reuben; Andrade, Maria. 2023. Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique. Poster. Presented at the CGIAR GENDER Conference 'From Research to Impact: Towards just and resilient agri-food systems', New Delhi, India, 9-12 October 2023. International Potato Center
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
research
sweet potatoes
plant breeding
innovation adoption
Mayanja, Sarah
Tinyiro, Samuel Edgar
Ogwal, Martin
Makunde, Godwill
Naico, Abdul
Nakitto, Mariam
Ssali, Reuben
Andrade, Maria
Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title_full Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title_fullStr Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title_full_unstemmed Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title_short Priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in Mozambique
title_sort priority quality traits for gendered sweet potato breeding in mozambique
topic gender
agriculture
research
sweet potatoes
plant breeding
innovation adoption
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136996
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