Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA

Through a combination of conventional and new approaches, root and tuber improvement programs have developed improved cassava varieties that combine multiple pest and disease resistances with superior postharvest qualities, and improve the yield potential by more than 50%. This new generation of ca...

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Autores principales: Okechukwu, R.U., James, B., Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas, Mahungu, N.M., Boahen, S., Kanju, E., Osei-Sarfoh, A.
Formato: Conference Proceedings
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Society for Tropical Root Crops 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80502
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author Okechukwu, R.U.
James, B.
Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas
Mahungu, N.M.
Boahen, S.
Kanju, E.
Osei-Sarfoh, A.
author_browse Boahen, S.
James, B.
Kanju, E.
Mahungu, N.M.
Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas
Okechukwu, R.U.
Osei-Sarfoh, A.
author_facet Okechukwu, R.U.
James, B.
Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas
Mahungu, N.M.
Boahen, S.
Kanju, E.
Osei-Sarfoh, A.
author_sort Okechukwu, R.U.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Through a combination of conventional and new approaches, root and tuber improvement programs have developed improved cassava varieties that combine multiple pest and disease resistances with superior postharvest qualities, and improve the yield potential by more than 50%. This new generation of cassava germplasm reflects the vision of an expanded future role for cassava in food, feed, and industrial applications. However, unsustainable community access to healthy planting materials of these varieties is a key constraint to higher on-farm productivity of cassava in Africa. The USAID/IITA multi-country project “Unleashing the Power of Cassava in Africa in response to the Food Price Crisis Project” (UPoCA) initiated by end 2008, has significantly increased community self supply schemes of cassava stem planting materials. Fifty-eight (58) improved varieties were planted in 2009 by small holder farmers associated with 55 partner organizations and 11 agricultural related firms. The partners established 306 community cassava stem multiplication sites on 448ha and planted approximately 9,649ha cassava farms with these varieties. The multiplication sites and production farms help to speed up horizontal spread of the varieties to benefit populations within 79,500 km2 and 107,500 km2 buffer zones of original introductions in Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, DR Congo and Tanzania in 2010 and 2011 respectively. Based on the current level of variety dissemination, the project is expected to achieve more than its 2-year target of 27,000 ha of new farms under improved cassava varieties. This will enable individual and producer groups to reduce their dependency on research institutes, national extension services and other external suppliers for varieties that had been released in the past years. Area-wide distribution of improved varieties will be backed by appropriate farmer training in appropriate cassava production techniques to raise national average on-farm yields by at least 30% more than baseline figures.
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spelling CGSpace805022024-01-08T18:54:14Z Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA Okechukwu, R.U. James, B. Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas Mahungu, N.M. Boahen, S. Kanju, E. Osei-Sarfoh, A. cassava yield gap disease control methods technology transfer upoca seed system yield gaps variety spread Through a combination of conventional and new approaches, root and tuber improvement programs have developed improved cassava varieties that combine multiple pest and disease resistances with superior postharvest qualities, and improve the yield potential by more than 50%. This new generation of cassava germplasm reflects the vision of an expanded future role for cassava in food, feed, and industrial applications. However, unsustainable community access to healthy planting materials of these varieties is a key constraint to higher on-farm productivity of cassava in Africa. The USAID/IITA multi-country project “Unleashing the Power of Cassava in Africa in response to the Food Price Crisis Project” (UPoCA) initiated by end 2008, has significantly increased community self supply schemes of cassava stem planting materials. Fifty-eight (58) improved varieties were planted in 2009 by small holder farmers associated with 55 partner organizations and 11 agricultural related firms. The partners established 306 community cassava stem multiplication sites on 448ha and planted approximately 9,649ha cassava farms with these varieties. The multiplication sites and production farms help to speed up horizontal spread of the varieties to benefit populations within 79,500 km2 and 107,500 km2 buffer zones of original introductions in Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, DR Congo and Tanzania in 2010 and 2011 respectively. Based on the current level of variety dissemination, the project is expected to achieve more than its 2-year target of 27,000 ha of new farms under improved cassava varieties. This will enable individual and producer groups to reduce their dependency on research institutes, national extension services and other external suppliers for varieties that had been released in the past years. Area-wide distribution of improved varieties will be backed by appropriate farmer training in appropriate cassava production techniques to raise national average on-farm yields by at least 30% more than baseline figures. 2012-02 2017-03-23T15:05:09Z 2017-03-23T15:05:09Z Conference Proceedings https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80502 en Limited Access International Society for Tropical Root Crops Okechukwu, R.U., James, B., Ntawuruhunga, P., Mahungu, N., Boahen, S., Kanju, E. & Osei-sarfoh, A. (2012). Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA. In: Proceedings of the 11th triennial Symposium of the ISTRC-AB held at Memling Hotel: tropical roots and tuber crops and the challenges of globalization and climate changes, (pp. 325-331), 4-8 October, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo.
spellingShingle cassava
yield gap
disease control methods
technology transfer
upoca
seed system
yield gaps
variety spread
Okechukwu, R.U.
James, B.
Ntawuruhunga, Pheneas
Mahungu, N.M.
Boahen, S.
Kanju, E.
Osei-Sarfoh, A.
Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title_full Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title_fullStr Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title_full_unstemmed Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title_short Distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by UPoCA
title_sort distribution and potential impact of cassava variety spread by upoca
topic cassava
yield gap
disease control methods
technology transfer
upoca
seed system
yield gaps
variety spread
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/80502
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