Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study

Over the millennia, desert dwellers have selected hundreds of different date palm varieties, each with particular characteristics. Currently, a single variety, the deglet nour, is favoured by the international market and is the most predominantly cultivated date palm in Tunisia threatening the long-...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bioversity International, Gotor, Elisabetta
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Bioversity International 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70598
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author Bioversity International
Gotor, Elisabetta
author_browse Bioversity International
Gotor, Elisabetta
author_facet Bioversity International
Gotor, Elisabetta
author_sort Bioversity International
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Over the millennia, desert dwellers have selected hundreds of different date palm varieties, each with particular characteristics. Currently, a single variety, the deglet nour, is favoured by the international market and is the most predominantly cultivated date palm in Tunisia threatening the long-term survival of alternative varieties and leading to genetic erosion. A Bioversity International project was implemented to encourage the diversification of date palms, as reliance on a single crop could threaten farmers’ future livelihoods if the vulnerable deglet nour were to fail due to pest and disease, or succumb to changes in market forces. This evaluation analyzes what impacts remain from the project 7 years beyond completion, and examines how the economic situation and the agricultural landscape of the farmers has evolved, with a view to determining valuable lessons for future project design. This publication is part of the Bioversity International’s series of Impact Assessment Briefs that aim to inform readers about the major results of evaluations carried out by the centre. The Briefs summarize conclusions and methods of more formal papers published in peer-reviewed journals.
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spelling CGSpace705982025-11-05T08:04:50Z Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study Bioversity International Gotor, Elisabetta phoenix dactylifera varieties project evaluation Over the millennia, desert dwellers have selected hundreds of different date palm varieties, each with particular characteristics. Currently, a single variety, the deglet nour, is favoured by the international market and is the most predominantly cultivated date palm in Tunisia threatening the long-term survival of alternative varieties and leading to genetic erosion. A Bioversity International project was implemented to encourage the diversification of date palms, as reliance on a single crop could threaten farmers’ future livelihoods if the vulnerable deglet nour were to fail due to pest and disease, or succumb to changes in market forces. This evaluation analyzes what impacts remain from the project 7 years beyond completion, and examines how the economic situation and the agricultural landscape of the farmers has evolved, with a view to determining valuable lessons for future project design. This publication is part of the Bioversity International’s series of Impact Assessment Briefs that aim to inform readers about the major results of evaluations carried out by the centre. The Briefs summarize conclusions and methods of more formal papers published in peer-reviewed journals. 2013 2016-02-03T09:01:30Z 2016-02-03T09:01:30Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70598 en Open Access application/pdf Bioversity International Gotor, E. (2013) Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study. Bioversity International, 4 p.
spellingShingle phoenix dactylifera
varieties
project evaluation
Bioversity International
Gotor, Elisabetta
Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title_full Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title_fullStr Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title_full_unstemmed Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title_short Date palms in Tunisia a follow-up study
title_sort date palms in tunisia a follow up study
topic phoenix dactylifera
varieties
project evaluation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70598
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