Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village

A socioeconomic study was conducted on cassava cultivation and starch production in Cuatro Esquinas, Cauca (Colombia). The area is characterized by small landowners, with a cheap supply of labor, 2 rainy seasons, temperate climate, with cassava and coffee as the 2 most important cash crops. Twenty-f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Strobosch, P
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/71814
_version_ 1855533180421931008
author Strobosch, P
author_browse Strobosch, P
author_facet Strobosch, P
author_sort Strobosch, P
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A socioeconomic study was conducted on cassava cultivation and starch production in Cuatro Esquinas, Cauca (Colombia). The area is characterized by small landowners, with a cheap supply of labor, 2 rainy seasons, temperate climate, with cassava and coffee as the 2 most important cash crops. Twenty-four small-scale starch factories exist in the region, the constant demand for cassava has stimulated its production, although there has not been a major change in agricultural practices. Starch factories may be considered as simple or mechanical, processing 600 and 1200 kg of cassava/day, resp.; although in the latter, cassava shortage may reduce processing to 600-750 kg of cassava/day. Sharecropping is common. After initial manual land clearing, the soil is ploughed with oxen, there is no crop rotation, and the majority of farmers grow 3 consecutive crops of cassava in the same field. Intercropping systems used are cassava/plaintain, cassava/maize, cassava/beans and cassava/maize/beans. Chemical technology is limited to the application of insecticides to control ants; herbicides and fertilizers are not used due to negative attitudes and lack of sufficient knowledge on their advantages and disadvantages. Except for the small amount used for home consumption, all the cassava is sold locally to the starch factories. Credit facilities are limited. Present problems in cassava cultivation include the growing scarcity of cassava due to excessive demand and to a decrease in cassava yields (frog skin disease and deterioration of soil fertility), lack of capital and refusal of starch producers to buy fertilized cassava. (CIAT)
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace71814
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1979
publishDateRange 1979
publishDateSort 1979
publisher International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr International Center for Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace718142025-11-05T18:05:37Z Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village Strobosch, P manihot esculenta cultivation processing socioeconomic aspects starch crops A socioeconomic study was conducted on cassava cultivation and starch production in Cuatro Esquinas, Cauca (Colombia). The area is characterized by small landowners, with a cheap supply of labor, 2 rainy seasons, temperate climate, with cassava and coffee as the 2 most important cash crops. Twenty-four small-scale starch factories exist in the region, the constant demand for cassava has stimulated its production, although there has not been a major change in agricultural practices. Starch factories may be considered as simple or mechanical, processing 600 and 1200 kg of cassava/day, resp.; although in the latter, cassava shortage may reduce processing to 600-750 kg of cassava/day. Sharecropping is common. After initial manual land clearing, the soil is ploughed with oxen, there is no crop rotation, and the majority of farmers grow 3 consecutive crops of cassava in the same field. Intercropping systems used are cassava/plaintain, cassava/maize, cassava/beans and cassava/maize/beans. Chemical technology is limited to the application of insecticides to control ants; herbicides and fertilizers are not used due to negative attitudes and lack of sufficient knowledge on their advantages and disadvantages. Except for the small amount used for home consumption, all the cassava is sold locally to the starch factories. Credit facilities are limited. Present problems in cassava cultivation include the growing scarcity of cassava due to excessive demand and to a decrease in cassava yields (frog skin disease and deterioration of soil fertility), lack of capital and refusal of starch producers to buy fertilized cassava. (CIAT) 1979 2016-02-29T17:12:53Z 2016-02-29T17:12:53Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/71814 en Open Access application/pdf International Center for Tropical Agriculture STROBOSCH, P. 1979. Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village. Centro Internacional de Agricultura Tropical (CIAT), Cali, CO. 12 p.
spellingShingle manihot esculenta
cultivation
processing
socioeconomic aspects
starch crops
Strobosch, P
Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title_full Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title_fullStr Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title_full_unstemmed Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title_short Cassava cultivation and starch production in an Andean village
title_sort cassava cultivation and starch production in an andean village
topic manihot esculenta
cultivation
processing
socioeconomic aspects
starch crops
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/71814
work_keys_str_mv AT stroboschp cassavacultivationandstarchproductioninanandeanvillage