Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress

The purpose of the research was to understand the fine-grained dynamics underlying potato seed networks in a center of crop origin and biodiversity, the central Andes of Peru, by differentiating between seasons with and without acute stress (i.e. frost, late blight), cultivar groups, and farmer type...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Arce, Alejandra, Haan, Stef de, Burra, Dharani Dhar, Ccanto, Raul I.
Formato: Conjunto de datos
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96242
_version_ 1855540588510707712
author Arce, Alejandra
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Ccanto, Raul I.
author_browse Arce, Alejandra
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Ccanto, Raul I.
Haan, Stef de
author_facet Arce, Alejandra
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Ccanto, Raul I.
author_sort Arce, Alejandra
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The purpose of the research was to understand the fine-grained dynamics underlying potato seed networks in a center of crop origin and biodiversity, the central Andes of Peru, by differentiating between seasons with and without acute stress (i.e. frost, late blight), cultivar groups, and farmer types. Cultivar groups were classified into (i) bred varieties, (ii) commercial floury landraces, (iii) non-commercial floury landraces (single cultivars), (iv) non-commercial floury landraces (mixed cultivars), and (v) bitter landraces. Farmer types were classified as (i) general farmers, (ii) seed specialists, and (iii) custodian farmers. We documented seed provisions and acquisitions through the application of a semi-structured survey to 336 households in 2014-2015 in two main regions of the Peruvian central Andes: Huancavelica and Pasco-Junin. Farmers self-determined the most recent seasons with and without acute stress, specified the cause of the stress (i.e. frost, hail, late blight, drought), and described seed transactions for each season. The survey consisted of ten sections: (i) socioeconomic data; (ii) cropping season; iii) cultivar-level procurement; iv) seed volumes; v) specific seed sources and sinks; vi) social relationship to providers and clients; vii) seed transaction types; viii) place (s) of seed transaction; ix) seed destination/origin; x) quality guarantee of seed (including certification). For each respondent, every single transaction of seed acquisition and provision was recorded as a separate entry. Results confirm that seed networks are uneven and distinct for cultivar groups and farmer types. The study details the adaptations the system makes in the aftermath of acute stress and assesses the implications of its dynamics for conservation. Seed networks did re-organize following seasons with acute seed stress. A notable shift involved a contraction of seed networks within sub-regional clusters. Following stress, the directionality of seed provision versus acquisition inverts. We conclude that the self-regulatory capacity of farmer seed networks represents a strong safety net through which smallholders can respond to crop failure and seed stress. (2014-10)
format Conjunto de datos
id CGSpace96242
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr International Center for Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace962422025-03-13T09:45:35Z Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress Arce, Alejandra Haan, Stef de Burra, Dharani Dhar Ccanto, Raul I. smallholders highlands plant genetic resources informal sector seed potatoes network analysis abiotic stress The purpose of the research was to understand the fine-grained dynamics underlying potato seed networks in a center of crop origin and biodiversity, the central Andes of Peru, by differentiating between seasons with and without acute stress (i.e. frost, late blight), cultivar groups, and farmer types. Cultivar groups were classified into (i) bred varieties, (ii) commercial floury landraces, (iii) non-commercial floury landraces (single cultivars), (iv) non-commercial floury landraces (mixed cultivars), and (v) bitter landraces. Farmer types were classified as (i) general farmers, (ii) seed specialists, and (iii) custodian farmers. We documented seed provisions and acquisitions through the application of a semi-structured survey to 336 households in 2014-2015 in two main regions of the Peruvian central Andes: Huancavelica and Pasco-Junin. Farmers self-determined the most recent seasons with and without acute stress, specified the cause of the stress (i.e. frost, hail, late blight, drought), and described seed transactions for each season. The survey consisted of ten sections: (i) socioeconomic data; (ii) cropping season; iii) cultivar-level procurement; iv) seed volumes; v) specific seed sources and sinks; vi) social relationship to providers and clients; vii) seed transaction types; viii) place (s) of seed transaction; ix) seed destination/origin; x) quality guarantee of seed (including certification). For each respondent, every single transaction of seed acquisition and provision was recorded as a separate entry. Results confirm that seed networks are uneven and distinct for cultivar groups and farmer types. The study details the adaptations the system makes in the aftermath of acute stress and assesses the implications of its dynamics for conservation. Seed networks did re-organize following seasons with acute seed stress. A notable shift involved a contraction of seed networks within sub-regional clusters. Following stress, the directionality of seed provision versus acquisition inverts. We conclude that the self-regulatory capacity of farmer seed networks represents a strong safety net through which smallholders can respond to crop failure and seed stress. (2014-10) 2018-07-17 2018-07-26T15:17:47Z 2018-07-26T15:17:47Z Dataset https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96242 en Open Access International Center for Tropical Agriculture Arce, Alejandra; De Haan, Stef; Burra, Dharani; Ccanto, Raul, 2018, "Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/FY2XIB, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:AwGn4ibSDa4vzeB7xHhmRw==
spellingShingle smallholders
highlands
plant genetic resources
informal sector
seed potatoes
network analysis
abiotic stress
Arce, Alejandra
Haan, Stef de
Burra, Dharani Dhar
Ccanto, Raul I.
Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title_full Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title_fullStr Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title_full_unstemmed Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title_short Unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high Andes: a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
title_sort unearthing unevenness of potato seed networks in the high andes a comparison of distinct cultivar groups and farmer types following seasons with and without acute stress
topic smallholders
highlands
plant genetic resources
informal sector
seed potatoes
network analysis
abiotic stress
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96242
work_keys_str_mv AT arcealejandra unearthingunevennessofpotatoseednetworksinthehighandesacomparisonofdistinctcultivargroupsandfarmertypesfollowingseasonswithandwithoutacutestress
AT haanstefde unearthingunevennessofpotatoseednetworksinthehighandesacomparisonofdistinctcultivargroupsandfarmertypesfollowingseasonswithandwithoutacutestress
AT burradharanidhar unearthingunevennessofpotatoseednetworksinthehighandesacomparisonofdistinctcultivargroupsandfarmertypesfollowingseasonswithandwithoutacutestress
AT ccantorauli unearthingunevennessofpotatoseednetworksinthehighandesacomparisonofdistinctcultivargroupsandfarmertypesfollowingseasonswithandwithoutacutestress