Mango cultivation in Benin

The mango tree is rustic and voluminous; it provides both a food staple and protection. In northern-central Benin, as in other similar agro-ecological zones in neighboring countries, the mango serves as a fruit crop and as a subsistence crop for family farms. As it ripens at the end of the dry seaso...

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Main Authors: Vayssières, Jean-François, Sinzogan, A.A.C., Adandonon, A., Coulibaly, O., Bokonon-Ganta, A.H.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: Studium Press LLC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80484
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author Vayssières, Jean-François
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Adandonon, A.
Coulibaly, O.
Bokonon-Ganta, A.H.
author_browse Adandonon, A.
Bokonon-Ganta, A.H.
Coulibaly, O.
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Vayssières, Jean-François
author_facet Vayssières, Jean-François
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Adandonon, A.
Coulibaly, O.
Bokonon-Ganta, A.H.
author_sort Vayssières, Jean-François
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The mango tree is rustic and voluminous; it provides both a food staple and protection. In northern-central Benin, as in other similar agro-ecological zones in neighboring countries, the mango serves as a fruit crop and as a subsistence crop for family farms. As it ripens at the end of the dry season and at the start of the rainy season, the mango is a fundamental source of nutrition for rural populations living in the Soudano-Sahelian regions of West Africa: it is rich in potassium, alphacarotene, vitamin C and calcium. Increased production and marketing of undamaged mangoes are important in reducing poverty, particularly in northern-central Benin (Soudanian areas). According to our survey on location of mango production in Benin, about 75% of mango orchards are concentrated in the Borgou district (Soudanian area). In Benin, and more generally in Sub-Saharan Africa, over 90% of mango production is ensured by small family farms with low financial investment capacity. In Benin we can find three fibrous polyembryonic types of “mangots” and 29 grafted mono-embryonic mango cultivars. The most abundant mango cultivars (grafted) are Gouverneur, Zill, Eldon, Ifac 3, Springfels, Dabshar, Ruby, Kent, Palmer, Smith, Keitt, Brooks. In 1994, an estimation assessed the area devoted to mango trees in Benin at 1191 ha, total production being 10,166 t, and average yield per ha being 8.5 t. Assessments reveal that Beninese mango producers are confronted with three main connected problems namely (i) deterioration of fruit quality due to fruit flies, (ii) saturation of the national market leading to wastage and lower prices and (iii) lack of post-harvest promotion. More than 60% of mango orchards belong to the “Gatherer production system” in Borgou district. Mango-infesting fruit flies as Ceratitis cosyra and Bactrocera invadens (Diptera Tephritidae) became the target pests in Benin as in other West African countries. About the fruit fly issue, IITA-CIRAD has developed a Regional Fruit Fly Control Project also called West African Fruit Fly Initiative (WAFFI) based at the IITA station of Cotonou. WAFFI has developed Researches for Development in Benin and is proposing an IPM-package to control/reduce the damage of fly species by taking into account the socio-economic aspect of the method at producer level. Mango fruit processing overcomes many post-harvest problems and add value to the product. Currently, it may be noted that in Benin, the share of processed fruit is a tiny proportion of total production. Few organizations / projects are dealing with this fruit processing activities among which we can mention as leader: “Centre de transformation des fruit tropicaux” (CTFT); Songhai NGO; the Monastery in Parakou; and the “Programme de Technologie Alimentaire” (PTA), which is part of the National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRAB).
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spelling CGSpace804842025-12-08T09:54:28Z Mango cultivation in Benin Vayssières, Jean-François Sinzogan, A.A.C. Adandonon, A. Coulibaly, O. Bokonon-Ganta, A.H. mangifera indica economic importance high value crop subsistence crop fruit processing The mango tree is rustic and voluminous; it provides both a food staple and protection. In northern-central Benin, as in other similar agro-ecological zones in neighboring countries, the mango serves as a fruit crop and as a subsistence crop for family farms. As it ripens at the end of the dry season and at the start of the rainy season, the mango is a fundamental source of nutrition for rural populations living in the Soudano-Sahelian regions of West Africa: it is rich in potassium, alphacarotene, vitamin C and calcium. Increased production and marketing of undamaged mangoes are important in reducing poverty, particularly in northern-central Benin (Soudanian areas). According to our survey on location of mango production in Benin, about 75% of mango orchards are concentrated in the Borgou district (Soudanian area). In Benin, and more generally in Sub-Saharan Africa, over 90% of mango production is ensured by small family farms with low financial investment capacity. In Benin we can find three fibrous polyembryonic types of “mangots” and 29 grafted mono-embryonic mango cultivars. The most abundant mango cultivars (grafted) are Gouverneur, Zill, Eldon, Ifac 3, Springfels, Dabshar, Ruby, Kent, Palmer, Smith, Keitt, Brooks. In 1994, an estimation assessed the area devoted to mango trees in Benin at 1191 ha, total production being 10,166 t, and average yield per ha being 8.5 t. Assessments reveal that Beninese mango producers are confronted with three main connected problems namely (i) deterioration of fruit quality due to fruit flies, (ii) saturation of the national market leading to wastage and lower prices and (iii) lack of post-harvest promotion. More than 60% of mango orchards belong to the “Gatherer production system” in Borgou district. Mango-infesting fruit flies as Ceratitis cosyra and Bactrocera invadens (Diptera Tephritidae) became the target pests in Benin as in other West African countries. About the fruit fly issue, IITA-CIRAD has developed a Regional Fruit Fly Control Project also called West African Fruit Fly Initiative (WAFFI) based at the IITA station of Cotonou. WAFFI has developed Researches for Development in Benin and is proposing an IPM-package to control/reduce the damage of fly species by taking into account the socio-economic aspect of the method at producer level. Mango fruit processing overcomes many post-harvest problems and add value to the product. Currently, it may be noted that in Benin, the share of processed fruit is a tiny proportion of total production. Few organizations / projects are dealing with this fruit processing activities among which we can mention as leader: “Centre de transformation des fruit tropicaux” (CTFT); Songhai NGO; the Monastery in Parakou; and the “Programme de Technologie Alimentaire” (PTA), which is part of the National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRAB). 2012 2017-03-23T13:00:15Z 2017-03-23T13:00:15Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80484 en Limited Access Studium Press LLC Vayssières, J.F., Sinzogan, A.A.C., Adandonon, A., & Coulibaly, O. (2012). Mango cultivation in Benin. Houston: Studium Press LLC.
spellingShingle mangifera indica
economic importance
high value crop
subsistence crop
fruit processing
Vayssières, Jean-François
Sinzogan, A.A.C.
Adandonon, A.
Coulibaly, O.
Bokonon-Ganta, A.H.
Mango cultivation in Benin
title Mango cultivation in Benin
title_full Mango cultivation in Benin
title_fullStr Mango cultivation in Benin
title_full_unstemmed Mango cultivation in Benin
title_short Mango cultivation in Benin
title_sort mango cultivation in benin
topic mangifera indica
economic importance
high value crop
subsistence crop
fruit processing
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80484
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AT bokonongantaah mangocultivationinbenin