Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi

The distribution of contaminated planting material (suckers) remains a major cause of spread of pests and diseases in banana. A traditional subsistence staple in East Africa, banana is becoming increasingly a commercialized commodity in the region. Essential for effective commercialization of this c...

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Autores principales: Bauer, V., Burkart, Stefan, Abele, S., Kahangi, E., Dubois, T., Coyne, Danny L., Hoffmann, Vivian
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90157
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author Bauer, V.
Burkart, Stefan
Abele, S.
Kahangi, E.
Dubois, T.
Coyne, Danny L.
Hoffmann, Vivian
author_browse Abele, S.
Bauer, V.
Burkart, Stefan
Coyne, Danny L.
Dubois, T.
Hoffmann, Vivian
Kahangi, E.
author_facet Bauer, V.
Burkart, Stefan
Abele, S.
Kahangi, E.
Dubois, T.
Coyne, Danny L.
Hoffmann, Vivian
author_sort Bauer, V.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The distribution of contaminated planting material (suckers) remains a major cause of spread of pests and diseases in banana. A traditional subsistence staple in East Africa, banana is becoming increasingly a commercialized commodity in the region. Essential for effective commercialization of this crop, however, is the supply and use of uniform and healthy planting material. Tissue culture (TC) technology can help provide this. However, TC plantlets are delicate and require substantially greater care and handling than conventional sucker planting material. To distribute TC seedlings to farmers and improve their robustness for successful use on farms, numerous hardening nurseries have been established by TC producers in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi. These nurseries are pivotal in the dissemination of plantlets. In 2008, financing, handling, hardening and marketing of TC-derived planting material through nurseries was assessed using semi-quantitative interviews of nursery operators. The nurseries in Kenya and Uganda are mostly farmer-led and obtain their material from the producer. In Burundi, the nurseries are owned and centrally managed by the producer, while daily activities are handled by technicians. In each country, water supply was identified as a key limiting factor, as the young plantlets desiccate easily. In farmer-led nurseries, plantlet transport and phytosanitary measures, such as soil sterilization and plant protection, are often limited, which can lead to significant plant losses. Governmental and non-governmental institutions purchase large fractions of the TC planting material. Public extension services for TC nurseries were evaluated as poor, leaving the TC producers as the single source of information for nursery operators. Additionally, plantlets tend to be viewed as relatively expensive, while supply is currently sub-optimal, compared to traditional planting material, resulting in a relatively limited and exclusive market. TC planting material in the region is therefore yet to be become sufficiently available for most banana farmers.
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spelling CGSpace901572023-06-08T19:54:46Z Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi Bauer, V. Burkart, Stefan Abele, S. Kahangi, E. Dubois, T. Coyne, Danny L. Hoffmann, Vivian tissue-culture markets bananas hardening and marketing sucker The distribution of contaminated planting material (suckers) remains a major cause of spread of pests and diseases in banana. A traditional subsistence staple in East Africa, banana is becoming increasingly a commercialized commodity in the region. Essential for effective commercialization of this crop, however, is the supply and use of uniform and healthy planting material. Tissue culture (TC) technology can help provide this. However, TC plantlets are delicate and require substantially greater care and handling than conventional sucker planting material. To distribute TC seedlings to farmers and improve their robustness for successful use on farms, numerous hardening nurseries have been established by TC producers in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi. These nurseries are pivotal in the dissemination of plantlets. In 2008, financing, handling, hardening and marketing of TC-derived planting material through nurseries was assessed using semi-quantitative interviews of nursery operators. The nurseries in Kenya and Uganda are mostly farmer-led and obtain their material from the producer. In Burundi, the nurseries are owned and centrally managed by the producer, while daily activities are handled by technicians. In each country, water supply was identified as a key limiting factor, as the young plantlets desiccate easily. In farmer-led nurseries, plantlet transport and phytosanitary measures, such as soil sterilization and plant protection, are often limited, which can lead to significant plant losses. Governmental and non-governmental institutions purchase large fractions of the TC planting material. Public extension services for TC nurseries were evaluated as poor, leaving the TC producers as the single source of information for nursery operators. Additionally, plantlets tend to be viewed as relatively expensive, while supply is currently sub-optimal, compared to traditional planting material, resulting in a relatively limited and exclusive market. TC planting material in the region is therefore yet to be become sufficiently available for most banana farmers. 2009 2018-01-15T10:50:40Z 2018-01-15T10:50:40Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90157 en Open Access Bauer, V., Burkart, S., Abele, S., Kahangi, E., Dubois, T., Coyne, D. & Hoffmann, V. (2009). Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culture-derived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi. In:Conference on International Research on Food Security, (p.1-4), October 6-8, 2009, University of Hamburg.
spellingShingle tissue-culture
markets
bananas
hardening and marketing
sucker
Bauer, V.
Burkart, Stefan
Abele, S.
Kahangi, E.
Dubois, T.
Coyne, Danny L.
Hoffmann, Vivian
Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title_full Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title_fullStr Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title_full_unstemmed Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title_short Financing, handling, hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries: the case of banana and plantain in Kenya, Uganda and Burundi
title_sort financing handling hardening and marketing of tissue culturederived planting material through nurseries the case of banana and plantain in kenya uganda and burundi
topic tissue-culture
markets
bananas
hardening and marketing
sucker
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/90157
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