Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria

Conventional top-down potato breeding often overlooks farmer input, leading to varieties that may not be suited to local conditions, limiting their adoption and impact on smallholder farming. To address this gap, this study evaluated whether a participatory, digitally enabled approach to variety sel...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sharma, K., Atieno, E., Sousa, K. de, Etten, Jacob van, Nyawade, S.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175676
_version_ 1855514583561666560
author Sharma, K.
Atieno, E.
Sousa, K. de
Etten, Jacob van
Nyawade, S.
author_browse Atieno, E.
Etten, Jacob van
Nyawade, S.
Sharma, K.
Sousa, K. de
author_facet Sharma, K.
Atieno, E.
Sousa, K. de
Etten, Jacob van
Nyawade, S.
author_sort Sharma, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Conventional top-down potato breeding often overlooks farmer input, leading to varieties that may not be suited to local conditions, limiting their adoption and impact on smallholder farming. To address this gap, this study evaluated whether a participatory, digitally enabled approach to variety selection better reflects farmer needs and improves uptake. This study employed the tricot (Triadic Comparisons of Technology Options) approach, a participatory framework, combined with digital tools for real-time data collection and decision support. Farmers from seven Local Government Areas (LGAs) in Plateau State, Nigeria (Barikin Ladi, Bassa, Bokkos, Jos North, Jos South, Mangu, and Pankshin), evaluated anonymized potato genotypes alongside the check variety Marabel. Trial design and genotype allocation were managed through ClimMob, a cloud-based platform (https://climmob.net), enabling live streaming and real-time tracking. Data were collected via a mobile app and Open Data Kit (ODK). Assessments occurred at three crop stages: vegetative (germination, disease resistance, drought tolerance), harvest (yield, tuber appearance, marketability), and post-harvest (cooking quality, storability). Farmer preferences were analyzed using the Plackett-Luce model, a probabilistic model that estimates the relative ‘worth’ (also referred to as log-worth) of each genotype based on observed rankings across multiple comparisons. CIP clones CIP392797.22 and CIP393371.157 emerged as top-ranked, with log-worth values of 0.620 and 0.309, respectively, indicating stronger preference relative to the check. In contrast, CIP398208.29 and CIP398190.200 were least preferred (–0.085 and –0.465). Socioeconomic factors influenced selection: market-oriented farmers prioritized commercial traits, while subsistence farmers emphasized resilience. This study highlights the value of participatory, data-driven breeding that integrates local knowledge to enhance adoption, resilience, and food security.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace175676
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1756762025-10-26T13:02:12Z Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria Sharma, K. Atieno, E. Sousa, K. de Etten, Jacob van Nyawade, S. potatoes participatory research smallholders Conventional top-down potato breeding often overlooks farmer input, leading to varieties that may not be suited to local conditions, limiting their adoption and impact on smallholder farming. To address this gap, this study evaluated whether a participatory, digitally enabled approach to variety selection better reflects farmer needs and improves uptake. This study employed the tricot (Triadic Comparisons of Technology Options) approach, a participatory framework, combined with digital tools for real-time data collection and decision support. Farmers from seven Local Government Areas (LGAs) in Plateau State, Nigeria (Barikin Ladi, Bassa, Bokkos, Jos North, Jos South, Mangu, and Pankshin), evaluated anonymized potato genotypes alongside the check variety Marabel. Trial design and genotype allocation were managed through ClimMob, a cloud-based platform (https://climmob.net), enabling live streaming and real-time tracking. Data were collected via a mobile app and Open Data Kit (ODK). Assessments occurred at three crop stages: vegetative (germination, disease resistance, drought tolerance), harvest (yield, tuber appearance, marketability), and post-harvest (cooking quality, storability). Farmer preferences were analyzed using the Plackett-Luce model, a probabilistic model that estimates the relative ‘worth’ (also referred to as log-worth) of each genotype based on observed rankings across multiple comparisons. CIP clones CIP392797.22 and CIP393371.157 emerged as top-ranked, with log-worth values of 0.620 and 0.309, respectively, indicating stronger preference relative to the check. In contrast, CIP398208.29 and CIP398190.200 were least preferred (–0.085 and –0.465). Socioeconomic factors influenced selection: market-oriented farmers prioritized commercial traits, while subsistence farmers emphasized resilience. This study highlights the value of participatory, data-driven breeding that integrates local knowledge to enhance adoption, resilience, and food security. 2025-10 2025-07-17T16:02:54Z 2025-07-17T16:02:54Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175676 en Open Access Elsevier Sharma, K.; Atieno, E.; Mugo, J.; de Sousa, K.; van Etten, J.; Nyawade, S. 2025. Understanding farmer preferences through citizen science: Insights on potato varieties in Nigeria. Journal of Agriculture and Food Research. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jafr.2025.102135
spellingShingle potatoes
participatory research
smallholders
Sharma, K.
Atieno, E.
Sousa, K. de
Etten, Jacob van
Nyawade, S.
Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title_full Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title_fullStr Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title_short Understanding Farmer Preferences through Citizen Science: Insights on Potato Varieties in Nigeria
title_sort understanding farmer preferences through citizen science insights on potato varieties in nigeria
topic potatoes
participatory research
smallholders
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175676
work_keys_str_mv AT sharmak understandingfarmerpreferencesthroughcitizenscienceinsightsonpotatovarietiesinnigeria
AT atienoe understandingfarmerpreferencesthroughcitizenscienceinsightsonpotatovarietiesinnigeria
AT sousakde understandingfarmerpreferencesthroughcitizenscienceinsightsonpotatovarietiesinnigeria
AT ettenjacobvan understandingfarmerpreferencesthroughcitizenscienceinsightsonpotatovarietiesinnigeria
AT nyawades understandingfarmerpreferencesthroughcitizenscienceinsightsonpotatovarietiesinnigeria