Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal

"Context Household seed security enhances agricultural productivity and strengthens climate resilience, yet persistent seed insecurity remains a critical challenge in Nepal despite intervention efforts. Notably, women play a significant role in seed systems across developing countries, yet their con...

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Autores principales: Atreya, Kishor, Gartaula, Hom Nath, Kattel, Kanchan
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176442
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author Atreya, Kishor
Gartaula, Hom Nath
Kattel, Kanchan
author_browse Atreya, Kishor
Gartaula, Hom Nath
Kattel, Kanchan
author_facet Atreya, Kishor
Gartaula, Hom Nath
Kattel, Kanchan
author_sort Atreya, Kishor
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description "Context Household seed security enhances agricultural productivity and strengthens climate resilience, yet persistent seed insecurity remains a critical challenge in Nepal despite intervention efforts. Notably, women play a significant role in seed systems across developing countries, yet their contributions are frequently marginalised because of entrenched gender norms and socio-cultural barriers. Objective This study examines seed security among maize and wheat-growing households in Nepal, analysing different social, economic, cultural, and spatial variables. It specifically investigates: (1) the current state of seed security for maize and wheat farmers, (2) the role of gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and other socioeconomic factors in shaping seed security, and (3) variations in these relationships across different seed security levels. Methodology Data were collected from 250 households across two municipalities during October–November 2021. Seed security was evaluated using the FAO's four-dimensional framework (availability, accessibility, varietal suitability, and quality). Gender-based household typologies (male-headed, female-headed, or jointly managed) were determined through Likert-scale assessments. Quantile regression analysis was employed to examine the effects of various contextual factors, including gender and ethnicity, on varying levels of seed security. Results and conclusion This study reveals distinct seed-sourcing patterns in Nepal's mountains: maize depends on formal markets (agrovets), while wheat relies on informal systems (saved seeds/local exchanges). Seed insecurity persists for both crops, shaped by divergent factors. Education and larger landholdings improve wheat seed security, whereas year-round food sufficiency enhances maize seed security. Paradoxically, access to formal market reduces wheat seed security, suggesting trade-offs. Experiences of historical seed insecurity have lasting negative effects, while informal seed saving practices build resilience, particularly at higher seed security levels. Gender analysis highlights women's central role in enhancing seed security, with Dalit households showing disproportionate vulnerability. In conclusion, findings highlight the need for crop-specific, context-sensitive interventions addressing systemic vulnerabilities in Nepal's mountain agri-food systems. Significance This research advances integrated seed sector development by demonstrating the need to recognise pluralistic seed systems and formulate crop-specific seed policies. The findings highlight how gender-inclusive approaches and formal-informal sector synergies can enhance seed security. "
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publishDate 2025
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spelling CGSpace1764422025-10-26T13:02:46Z Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal Atreya, Kishor Gartaula, Hom Nath Kattel, Kanchan seeds seed systems maize wheat households farmers agricultural productivity food security resilience climate change Nepal "Context Household seed security enhances agricultural productivity and strengthens climate resilience, yet persistent seed insecurity remains a critical challenge in Nepal despite intervention efforts. Notably, women play a significant role in seed systems across developing countries, yet their contributions are frequently marginalised because of entrenched gender norms and socio-cultural barriers. Objective This study examines seed security among maize and wheat-growing households in Nepal, analysing different social, economic, cultural, and spatial variables. It specifically investigates: (1) the current state of seed security for maize and wheat farmers, (2) the role of gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and other socioeconomic factors in shaping seed security, and (3) variations in these relationships across different seed security levels. Methodology Data were collected from 250 households across two municipalities during October–November 2021. Seed security was evaluated using the FAO's four-dimensional framework (availability, accessibility, varietal suitability, and quality). Gender-based household typologies (male-headed, female-headed, or jointly managed) were determined through Likert-scale assessments. Quantile regression analysis was employed to examine the effects of various contextual factors, including gender and ethnicity, on varying levels of seed security. Results and conclusion This study reveals distinct seed-sourcing patterns in Nepal's mountains: maize depends on formal markets (agrovets), while wheat relies on informal systems (saved seeds/local exchanges). Seed insecurity persists for both crops, shaped by divergent factors. Education and larger landholdings improve wheat seed security, whereas year-round food sufficiency enhances maize seed security. Paradoxically, access to formal market reduces wheat seed security, suggesting trade-offs. Experiences of historical seed insecurity have lasting negative effects, while informal seed saving practices build resilience, particularly at higher seed security levels. Gender analysis highlights women's central role in enhancing seed security, with Dalit households showing disproportionate vulnerability. In conclusion, findings highlight the need for crop-specific, context-sensitive interventions addressing systemic vulnerabilities in Nepal's mountain agri-food systems. Significance This research advances integrated seed sector development by demonstrating the need to recognise pluralistic seed systems and formulate crop-specific seed policies. The findings highlight how gender-inclusive approaches and formal-informal sector synergies can enhance seed security. " 2025-10 2025-09-11T03:14:31Z 2025-09-11T03:14:31Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176442 en Limited Access Elsevier Atreya, Kishor, Hom Nath Gartaula, and Kanchan Kattel. "Household seed security: a case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal." Agricultural Systems 229 (2025): 104419.
spellingShingle seeds
seed systems
maize
wheat
households
farmers
agricultural productivity
food security
resilience
climate change
Nepal
Atreya, Kishor
Gartaula, Hom Nath
Kattel, Kanchan
Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title_full Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title_fullStr Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title_short Household seed security: A case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of Nepal
title_sort household seed security a case of maize and wheat seed systems in the mountains of nepal
topic seeds
seed systems
maize
wheat
households
farmers
agricultural productivity
food security
resilience
climate change
Nepal
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/176442
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AT gartaulahomnath householdseedsecurityacaseofmaizeandwheatseedsystemsinthemountainsofnepal
AT kattelkanchan householdseedsecurityacaseofmaizeandwheatseedsystemsinthemountainsofnepal