Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives

Over the past three decades, more than 40 banana cultivars have been introduced in eastern and southern Africa for evaluation and dissemination to smallholder farmers facing banana productivity challenges. This study analyses the seed systems used to avail the genotypes to the target users, discusse...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Karamura, E.B., Tinzaara, William, Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi, Ochola, D., Ocimati, W., Karamura, D.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: International Society for Horticultural Science 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/73228
_version_ 1855524598645260288
author Karamura, E.B.
Tinzaara, William
Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Karamura, D.
author_browse Karamura, D.
Karamura, E.B.
Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Tinzaara, William
author_facet Karamura, E.B.
Tinzaara, William
Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Karamura, D.
author_sort Karamura, E.B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Over the past three decades, more than 40 banana cultivars have been introduced in eastern and southern Africa for evaluation and dissemination to smallholder farmers facing banana productivity challenges. This study analyses the seed systems used to avail the genotypes to the target users, discusses farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives in five countries NDASH Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, Rwanda and Uganda. The study reveals that materials came from the International Transit Centre as tissue culture plantlets (rooting or proliferating), from private companies such as Du Roi, South Africa and from the national and international breeding programs such as NARO-Uganda and International Institute of Tropical Agriculture. Within the countries, new genotypes followed both the formal and informal seed systems. Of the 44 genotypes introduced, 18 were not adopted and the adoption of the others depended on the end users' socioeconomic perspectives. For green-cooking bananas, farmers selected for sensory attributes (taste, flavor, texture, color of the food when cooked). For dessert bananas targeting local and regional markets, in addition to sensory attributes, farmers selected for bunch, hand and finger characteristics plus similarity with other traditional dessert cultivars. The selection for juice/beer/wine cultivars focused on astringency, starch, plant vigor and bunch size. Irrespective of the end use, resistance to pests and diseases and early maturation were important considerations. Analysis showed that sensory attributes significantly contributed to the consumers' willingness to pay for new cultivars. Farmers explored new uses and two cultivars were adapted to new uses while another two were adapted to new consumer markets. It is suggested that by involving the end users in the evaluation and selection of new cultivars (participatory variety selection, PVS) adoption of introduced cultivars would be enhanced.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace73228
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher International Society for Horticultural Science
publisherStr International Society for Horticultural Science
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace732282025-11-05T07:30:18Z Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives Karamura, E.B. Tinzaara, William Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi Ochola, D. Ocimati, W. Karamura, D. bananas varieties genotypes gene banks seed systems plant production consumers Over the past three decades, more than 40 banana cultivars have been introduced in eastern and southern Africa for evaluation and dissemination to smallholder farmers facing banana productivity challenges. This study analyses the seed systems used to avail the genotypes to the target users, discusses farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives in five countries NDASH Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, Rwanda and Uganda. The study reveals that materials came from the International Transit Centre as tissue culture plantlets (rooting or proliferating), from private companies such as Du Roi, South Africa and from the national and international breeding programs such as NARO-Uganda and International Institute of Tropical Agriculture. Within the countries, new genotypes followed both the formal and informal seed systems. Of the 44 genotypes introduced, 18 were not adopted and the adoption of the others depended on the end users' socioeconomic perspectives. For green-cooking bananas, farmers selected for sensory attributes (taste, flavor, texture, color of the food when cooked). For dessert bananas targeting local and regional markets, in addition to sensory attributes, farmers selected for bunch, hand and finger characteristics plus similarity with other traditional dessert cultivars. The selection for juice/beer/wine cultivars focused on astringency, starch, plant vigor and bunch size. Irrespective of the end use, resistance to pests and diseases and early maturation were important considerations. Analysis showed that sensory attributes significantly contributed to the consumers' willingness to pay for new cultivars. Farmers explored new uses and two cultivars were adapted to new uses while another two were adapted to new consumer markets. It is suggested that by involving the end users in the evaluation and selection of new cultivars (participatory variety selection, PVS) adoption of introduced cultivars would be enhanced. 2016-03 2016-04-28T08:42:04Z 2016-04-28T08:42:04Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/73228 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/72946 Limited Access application/pdf International Society for Horticultural Science Karamura, E.B.; Tinzaara, W.; Kikulwe, E.; Ochola, D.; Ocimati, W.; Karamura, D. (2016) Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives. In: Proceedings. IX International Symposium on Banana: ISHS-ProMusa Symposium on Unravelling the Banana's Genomic Potential. (Smith, M. et al (eds.)) Acta Horticulturae, 1114: p. 239-244. Leuven (Belgium), ISHS. ISBN: 978-94-62611-08-5
spellingShingle bananas
varieties
genotypes
gene banks
seed
systems
plant production
consumers
Karamura, E.B.
Tinzaara, William
Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Ochola, D.
Ocimati, W.
Karamura, D.
Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title_full Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title_fullStr Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title_short Introduced banana hybrids in Africa: seed systems, farmers' experiences and consumers' perspectives
title_sort introduced banana hybrids in africa seed systems farmers experiences and consumers perspectives
topic bananas
varieties
genotypes
gene banks
seed
systems
plant production
consumers
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/73228
work_keys_str_mv AT karamuraeb introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives
AT tinzaarawilliam introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives
AT kikulweenochmutebi introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives
AT ocholad introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives
AT ocimatiw introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives
AT karamurad introducedbananahybridsinafricaseedsystemsfarmersexperiencesandconsumersperspectives