Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions

Cassava is a vital food security crop grown in the tropics primarily for its starchy tuberous roots that play a significant role in calorie intake in Africa. The cassava seed system has been historically neglected resulting in the widespread propagation of poor quality and diseased planting material...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Msami, J., Ndalahwa, M., Nickas, J., Arbogast, M., Nkwabi, J., Mwakyusa, N., Mwenisongole, A., Matondo, D.G., Kumar, P.L., Legg, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175250
_version_ 1855532497805246464
author Msami, J.
Ndalahwa, M.
Nickas, J.
Arbogast, M.
Nkwabi, J.
Mwakyusa, N.
Mwenisongole, A.
Matondo, D.G.
Kumar, P.L.
Legg, J.
author_browse Arbogast, M.
Kumar, P.L.
Legg, J.
Matondo, D.G.
Msami, J.
Mwakyusa, N.
Mwenisongole, A.
Ndalahwa, M.
Nickas, J.
Nkwabi, J.
author_facet Msami, J.
Ndalahwa, M.
Nickas, J.
Arbogast, M.
Nkwabi, J.
Mwakyusa, N.
Mwenisongole, A.
Matondo, D.G.
Kumar, P.L.
Legg, J.
author_sort Msami, J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cassava is a vital food security crop grown in the tropics primarily for its starchy tuberous roots that play a significant role in calorie intake in Africa. The cassava seed system has been historically neglected resulting in the widespread propagation of poor quality and diseased planting materials (stems/cuttings). Recently there have been ongoing efforts to modernise cassava breeding and improve seed delivery in Tanzania which have resulted in the creation of a functional and commercially sustainable cassava seed system. This system comprises a decentralized network of seed producers in a hierarchy from early generation to community-based seed with different quality assurance requirements at each level. Seed entrepreneurs are registered on a ‘SeedTracker™' database where volumes of seed produced can be tracked for each variety. In this study, we analysed SeedTracker™ data and household survey data to determine the Weighted Average Varietal Age (WAVA) of improved cassava varieties in Tanzania. We used total seed (cuttings) produced as weights for WAVA estimations. Results showed changes in WAVA from 11.3 years in 2018, 13.6 years in 2019, 13.5 years in 2020, 10.6 years in 2021, 11.4 years in 2022 to 10.1 years in 2023. This suggests that there is an accelerating turnover rate of improved cassava varieties. The findings of this study are useful to cassava seed system actors such as policymakers, quality assurance agencies, breeders, and seed businesses. This study also serves as an indicator of the positive impacts being achieved through cassava seed system interventions in the country. Furthermore, it validates the adopted cassava seed system model and suggests that the model could be readily adapted to other crop systems where varieties are being routinely monitored.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace175250
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1752502025-12-08T10:29:22Z Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions Msami, J. Ndalahwa, M. Nickas, J. Arbogast, M. Nkwabi, J. Mwakyusa, N. Mwenisongole, A. Matondo, D.G. Kumar, P.L. Legg, J. cassava manihot esculenta varieties seed systems food security east africa Cassava is a vital food security crop grown in the tropics primarily for its starchy tuberous roots that play a significant role in calorie intake in Africa. The cassava seed system has been historically neglected resulting in the widespread propagation of poor quality and diseased planting materials (stems/cuttings). Recently there have been ongoing efforts to modernise cassava breeding and improve seed delivery in Tanzania which have resulted in the creation of a functional and commercially sustainable cassava seed system. This system comprises a decentralized network of seed producers in a hierarchy from early generation to community-based seed with different quality assurance requirements at each level. Seed entrepreneurs are registered on a ‘SeedTracker™' database where volumes of seed produced can be tracked for each variety. In this study, we analysed SeedTracker™ data and household survey data to determine the Weighted Average Varietal Age (WAVA) of improved cassava varieties in Tanzania. We used total seed (cuttings) produced as weights for WAVA estimations. Results showed changes in WAVA from 11.3 years in 2018, 13.6 years in 2019, 13.5 years in 2020, 10.6 years in 2021, 11.4 years in 2022 to 10.1 years in 2023. This suggests that there is an accelerating turnover rate of improved cassava varieties. The findings of this study are useful to cassava seed system actors such as policymakers, quality assurance agencies, breeders, and seed businesses. This study also serves as an indicator of the positive impacts being achieved through cassava seed system interventions in the country. Furthermore, it validates the adopted cassava seed system model and suggests that the model could be readily adapted to other crop systems where varieties are being routinely monitored. 2025 2025-06-23T10:13:38Z 2025-06-23T10:13:38Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175250 en Open Access application/pdf Frontiers Media Msami, J., Ndalahwa, M., Nickas, J., Arbogast, M., Nkwabi, J., Mwakyusa, N., ... & Legg, J. (2025). Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems, 9: 1564907, 1-10.
spellingShingle cassava
manihot esculenta
varieties
seed systems
food security
east africa
Msami, J.
Ndalahwa, M.
Nickas, J.
Arbogast, M.
Nkwabi, J.
Mwakyusa, N.
Mwenisongole, A.
Matondo, D.G.
Kumar, P.L.
Legg, J.
Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title_full Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title_fullStr Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title_full_unstemmed Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title_short Accelerated cassava varietal turnover in Tanzania, a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
title_sort accelerated cassava varietal turnover in tanzania a direct result of cassava seed system interventions
topic cassava
manihot esculenta
varieties
seed systems
food security
east africa
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175250
work_keys_str_mv AT msamij acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT ndalahwam acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT nickasj acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT arbogastm acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT nkwabij acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT mwakyusan acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT mwenisongolea acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT matondodg acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT kumarpl acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions
AT leggj acceleratedcassavavarietalturnoverintanzaniaadirectresultofcassavaseedsysteminterventions