A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa

Maize researchers in West and Central Africa (WCA) established the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) in 1987 to tackle maize production constraints too formidable for individual national programs to overcome. The National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) that...

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Autores principales: Fakorede, M.A.B., Badu-Apraku, Baffour, Menkir, A., Ajala, S.O., Lum, A.F.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Institute of Tropical Agriculture 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91164
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author Fakorede, M.A.B.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
Ajala, S.O.
Lum, A.F.
author_browse Ajala, S.O.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Lum, A.F.
Menkir, A.
author_facet Fakorede, M.A.B.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
Ajala, S.O.
Lum, A.F.
author_sort Fakorede, M.A.B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Maize researchers in West and Central Africa (WCA) established the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) in 1987 to tackle maize production constraints too formidable for individual national programs to overcome. The National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) that were relatively strong for specific research areas were funded by the Network to generate improved technologies, which were evaluated in on-farm trials and adopted or adapted in other member countries of the Network. The Network allocated funds for research and other activities to member countries through competitive grants. USAID has been the major funding agency of WECAMAN since inception. In recent years, aditional funding support came from IFAD and UNDP through the Africa Maize Stress Project, the Nippon Foundation QPM Project, and the HarvestPlus Challenge Program. The NARS of WCA provided research and development infrastructure, staff salaries, and logistics for research. International agricultural research centers, specifically, IITA and CIMMYT, have been providing the required source germplasm. IITA has been the executing agency of the Network since inception and has also provided advanced laboratory and other necessary research support facilities and experienced scientists for expert consultation, as necessary. The Network made major breakthroughs during the period under review by generating and transferring to farmers improved maize production technologies. Maize production increased in the traditional maize belts and was extended to new areas. Average productivity of maize increased by about 30% while total grain production in the region increased by nearly 400% during the two decades of WECAMAN's existence. Other benefits derived from the Network were improved research capacity of the NARS and capability of the research technicians and scientists, better research-extension-farmer linkage, improved research management and communication skills of the scientists and improved interpersonal relationships, with enhanced trust and confidence among maize scientists in the subregion. WECAMAN's success has resulted from the effective and efficient collaboration of the three major players, the NARS, IARCs, and donors.
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spelling CGSpace911642023-08-03T08:10:50Z A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa Fakorede, M.A.B. Badu-Apraku, Baffour Menkir, A. Ajala, S.O. Lum, A.F. maize production varieties Maize researchers in West and Central Africa (WCA) established the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) in 1987 to tackle maize production constraints too formidable for individual national programs to overcome. The National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) that were relatively strong for specific research areas were funded by the Network to generate improved technologies, which were evaluated in on-farm trials and adopted or adapted in other member countries of the Network. The Network allocated funds for research and other activities to member countries through competitive grants. USAID has been the major funding agency of WECAMAN since inception. In recent years, aditional funding support came from IFAD and UNDP through the Africa Maize Stress Project, the Nippon Foundation QPM Project, and the HarvestPlus Challenge Program. The NARS of WCA provided research and development infrastructure, staff salaries, and logistics for research. International agricultural research centers, specifically, IITA and CIMMYT, have been providing the required source germplasm. IITA has been the executing agency of the Network since inception and has also provided advanced laboratory and other necessary research support facilities and experienced scientists for expert consultation, as necessary. The Network made major breakthroughs during the period under review by generating and transferring to farmers improved maize production technologies. Maize production increased in the traditional maize belts and was extended to new areas. Average productivity of maize increased by about 30% while total grain production in the region increased by nearly 400% during the two decades of WECAMAN's existence. Other benefits derived from the Network were improved research capacity of the NARS and capability of the research technicians and scientists, better research-extension-farmer linkage, improved research management and communication skills of the scientists and improved interpersonal relationships, with enhanced trust and confidence among maize scientists in the subregion. WECAMAN's success has resulted from the effective and efficient collaboration of the three major players, the NARS, IARCs, and donors. 2007 2018-02-21T13:13:34Z 2018-02-21T13:13:34Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91164 en Limited Access International Institute of Tropical Agriculture Fakorede, M.A.B., Badu-Apraku, B., Menkir, A., Ajala, S.O. & Lum, A.F. (2007). A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa. In Fifth biennial regional maize workshop: demand-driven technologies for sustainable maize production in West and Central Africa, (pp. 3-24), 3-6 May, Cotonou, Benin.
spellingShingle maize
production
varieties
Fakorede, M.A.B.
Badu-Apraku, Baffour
Menkir, A.
Ajala, S.O.
Lum, A.F.
A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title_full A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title_fullStr A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title_full_unstemmed A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title_short A review of NARES-IARC-Donor collaboration to develop demand-driven technologies for improved maize production in West and Central Africa
title_sort review of nares iarc donor collaboration to develop demand driven technologies for improved maize production in west and central africa
topic maize
production
varieties
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91164
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