Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia

Participation of farmers in research process from early stage has been gaining ground in breeding research. Participant farmers can provide very valuable scientific evaluation of genotypes that can be used for effective discrimination of useful varieties easily adopted by similar farmers. Participat...

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Main Authors: Mengistu, D.K., Kiros, A.Y., Mohammed, J.N., Fadda, Carlo
Format: Conference Paper Abstract
Language:Inglés
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78096
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author Mengistu, D.K.
Kiros, A.Y.
Mohammed, J.N.
Fadda, Carlo
author_browse Fadda, Carlo
Kiros, A.Y.
Mengistu, D.K.
Mohammed, J.N.
author_facet Mengistu, D.K.
Kiros, A.Y.
Mohammed, J.N.
Fadda, Carlo
author_sort Mengistu, D.K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Participation of farmers in research process from early stage has been gaining ground in breeding research. Participant farmers can provide very valuable scientific evaluation of genotypes that can be used for effective discrimination of useful varieties easily adopted by similar farmers. Participatory varietal selection (PVS) is a powerful tool in identifying crops varieties with high acceptance probability in marginal environments because participant farmers evaluate the genotypes not only from yield perspective but also from stress tolerance perspective. Here we present a participatory MET conducted in four locations to select durum wheat landraces for larger scale production in the areas. In all four locations, 36 genotypes (31 landraces plus 5 improved varieties) were tested for two cropping seasons and evaluated by both researchers and farmers groups. In each location, a total of 30 farmers (15 female and 15 male) and five breeders critically evaluated the each variety for earliness, spike quality, drought tolerance and overall performance on scale of 1 to 5, traits defined by the farmers themselves. 1 stands for bad and 5 for excellent performance. Researchers have collected data for three phenological traits and seven agronomic traits and analysis was conducted to see preference matching between researcher data and farmers score data. The results show clearly that farmers are capable to discriminate genotypes reasonably though their discrimination power varies from location to location. The discrimination by breeders was consistent across locations. Very high significant (p<0.01) association was established between farmers visual score and researchers collected grain yield data and days to maturity in all locations with some exceptions for maturity date. Genotypes ranking for grain yield based on researchers collected data and farmer scoring matched about 80% in the 10 top performing genotypes. In conclusion: · Participatory varietal selection could bridge the problem of variety adoption by complementing farmers and breeders preferences . · Farmers are keen in evaluating genotypes and have reasons for rejecting or accepting varieties . · There was good agreement between farmers score and objectively collected data in identifying the 10 top performing genotypes. Participatory MET could be a reliable approach for fast technology development and dissemination as it considers the involvement of end users from the very beginning.
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spelling CGSpace780962025-11-05T07:52:17Z Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia Mengistu, D.K. Kiros, A.Y. Mohammed, J.N. Fadda, Carlo land races farmers participation triticum durum Participation of farmers in research process from early stage has been gaining ground in breeding research. Participant farmers can provide very valuable scientific evaluation of genotypes that can be used for effective discrimination of useful varieties easily adopted by similar farmers. Participatory varietal selection (PVS) is a powerful tool in identifying crops varieties with high acceptance probability in marginal environments because participant farmers evaluate the genotypes not only from yield perspective but also from stress tolerance perspective. Here we present a participatory MET conducted in four locations to select durum wheat landraces for larger scale production in the areas. In all four locations, 36 genotypes (31 landraces plus 5 improved varieties) were tested for two cropping seasons and evaluated by both researchers and farmers groups. In each location, a total of 30 farmers (15 female and 15 male) and five breeders critically evaluated the each variety for earliness, spike quality, drought tolerance and overall performance on scale of 1 to 5, traits defined by the farmers themselves. 1 stands for bad and 5 for excellent performance. Researchers have collected data for three phenological traits and seven agronomic traits and analysis was conducted to see preference matching between researcher data and farmers score data. The results show clearly that farmers are capable to discriminate genotypes reasonably though their discrimination power varies from location to location. The discrimination by breeders was consistent across locations. Very high significant (p<0.01) association was established between farmers visual score and researchers collected grain yield data and days to maturity in all locations with some exceptions for maturity date. Genotypes ranking for grain yield based on researchers collected data and farmer scoring matched about 80% in the 10 top performing genotypes. In conclusion: · Participatory varietal selection could bridge the problem of variety adoption by complementing farmers and breeders preferences . · Farmers are keen in evaluating genotypes and have reasons for rejecting or accepting varieties . · There was good agreement between farmers score and objectively collected data in identifying the 10 top performing genotypes. Participatory MET could be a reliable approach for fast technology development and dissemination as it considers the involvement of end users from the very beginning. 2016 2016-12-02T10:26:25Z 2016-12-02T10:26:25Z Conference Paper Abstract https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78096 en Limited Access application/pdf Mengistu, D.K.; Kiros, A.Y.; Mohammed, J.N.; Fadda, C. (2016) Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia. [Abstract] presented at: Tropentag 2016: Solidarity in a competing world — fair use of resources. Vienna (Austria) Sep 18-21. 1 p.
spellingShingle land races
farmers
participation
triticum durum
Mengistu, D.K.
Kiros, A.Y.
Mohammed, J.N.
Fadda, Carlo
Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title_full Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title_short Participatory Multi-Environmental Trials (MET) identified promising durum wheat landraces in Northern Ethiopia
title_sort participatory multi environmental trials met identified promising durum wheat landraces in northern ethiopia
topic land races
farmers
participation
triticum durum
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/78096
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AT mohammedjn participatorymultienvironmentaltrialsmetidentifiedpromisingdurumwheatlandracesinnorthernethiopia
AT faddacarlo participatorymultienvironmentaltrialsmetidentifiedpromisingdurumwheatlandracesinnorthernethiopia