Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda

While bush beans ( Phaseolus vulgaris check for this species in other resources L.) have long been the protein staple of Rwandan agriculture, improved climbing beans have been introduced within the last 10 years, enabling farmers to intensify, stabilize and better stagger production. Through a 1992...

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Main Authors: Sperling, L., Munyanesa, S
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43603
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author Sperling, L.
Munyanesa, S
author_browse Munyanesa, S
Sperling, L.
author_facet Sperling, L.
Munyanesa, S
author_sort Sperling, L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description While bush beans ( Phaseolus vulgaris check for this species in other resources L.) have long been the protein staple of Rwandan agriculture, improved climbing beans have been introduced within the last 10 years, enabling farmers to intensify, stabilize and better stagger production. Through a 1992-3 nation-wide survey of 1050 households, conducted in both major growing seasons, this study examines the adoption of improved climbing beans across regions and potential user groups. Use of improved climbing beans, by 500,000 households, cross-cuts farm size, economic class and gender boundaries, and is most intensive among the more disadvantaged. Initial concerns with staking material, how to obtain and manage it, have posed relatively few problems for farmers, and the surprising plasticity of improved climbers has encouraged research to more closely determine soil fertility demands. Increased incidence of root rot ( Fusarium oxysporum check for this species in other resources ) and fear of reduced genetic variability on-farm have resulted in the Institut des Sciences Agronomique du Rwanda (ISAR's) adopting targeted pathogen screening procedures and releasing many new cultivars simultaneously. The success of improved climbers, bringing Rwanda an additional US$ 8 to 15 million per year, has stimulated promising R & D efforts in Kivu, Zaire and southern Burundi, and several other Eastern African regions have been identified as prime for climbing bean introduction.
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spelling CGSpace436032023-06-13T04:55:50Z Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda Sperling, L. Munyanesa, S phaseolus vulgaris high yielding varieties fusarium oxysporum small farms innovation adoption intensification variedades de alto rendimiento explotación en pequeña escala adopción de innovaciones intensificación ruanda gender While bush beans ( Phaseolus vulgaris check for this species in other resources L.) have long been the protein staple of Rwandan agriculture, improved climbing beans have been introduced within the last 10 years, enabling farmers to intensify, stabilize and better stagger production. Through a 1992-3 nation-wide survey of 1050 households, conducted in both major growing seasons, this study examines the adoption of improved climbing beans across regions and potential user groups. Use of improved climbing beans, by 500,000 households, cross-cuts farm size, economic class and gender boundaries, and is most intensive among the more disadvantaged. Initial concerns with staking material, how to obtain and manage it, have posed relatively few problems for farmers, and the surprising plasticity of improved climbers has encouraged research to more closely determine soil fertility demands. Increased incidence of root rot ( Fusarium oxysporum check for this species in other resources ) and fear of reduced genetic variability on-farm have resulted in the Institut des Sciences Agronomique du Rwanda (ISAR's) adopting targeted pathogen screening procedures and releasing many new cultivars simultaneously. The success of improved climbers, bringing Rwanda an additional US$ 8 to 15 million per year, has stimulated promising R & D efforts in Kivu, Zaire and southern Burundi, and several other Eastern African regions have been identified as prime for climbing bean introduction. 1995 2014-09-24T08:42:23Z 2014-09-24T08:42:23Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43603 en Open Access Sperling, L; Munyanesa, S. 1995. Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda. African Crop Science Journal 3(1) 117-125.
spellingShingle phaseolus vulgaris
high yielding varieties
fusarium oxysporum
small farms
innovation adoption
intensification
variedades de alto rendimiento
explotación en pequeña escala
adopción de innovaciones
intensificación
ruanda
gender
Sperling, L.
Munyanesa, S
Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title_full Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title_fullStr Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title_full_unstemmed Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title_short Intensifying production among smallholder farmers: The impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda
title_sort intensifying production among smallholder farmers the impact of improved climbing beans in rwanda
topic phaseolus vulgaris
high yielding varieties
fusarium oxysporum
small farms
innovation adoption
intensification
variedades de alto rendimiento
explotación en pequeña escala
adopción de innovaciones
intensificación
ruanda
gender
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43603
work_keys_str_mv AT sperlingl intensifyingproductionamongsmallholderfarmerstheimpactofimprovedclimbingbeansinrwanda
AT munyanesas intensifyingproductionamongsmallholderfarmerstheimpactofimprovedclimbingbeansinrwanda