Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach
The major thrust of the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) has been on the development of early and extra-early maize varieties and associated agronomic practices. Adoption of these varieties and, to some extent, the complementary agronomic practices by farmers ha...
| Autores principales: | , , |
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| Formato: | Conference Paper |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
2003
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| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97976 |
| _version_ | 1855524919635345408 |
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| author | Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. Ajala, S.O. |
| author_browse | Ajala, S.O. Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. |
| author_facet | Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. Ajala, S.O. |
| author_sort | Badu-Apraku, Baffour |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | The major thrust of the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) has been on the development of early and extra-early maize varieties and associated agronomic practices. Adoption of these varieties and, to some extent, the complementary agronomic practices by farmers has led to the expansion of maize production in the sub region. However, the rate of adoption of the technologies has been constrained by several factors, including high price and non-availability of inputs, poor seed production and distribution, inadequate on-farm testing of available technologies, inadequate number of extension workers and poor researcher-extension farmer linkages. We discuss herein the strategy employed by WECAMAN to facilitate better adoption of the technologies. The strategy includes the commissioning of studies on alternative methods of soil management, development of community seed production schemes, use of farmer participatory methods and the production test plot (PTP) as tools to test and demonstrate new technologies, and strengthening research-extension farmer linkages. The network also funded marketing studies to document the evolution of domestic maize production and how it can be used to influence policy in WECAMAN member countries. The payoff is that during the last two decades of the 20th Century, maize production has increased dramatically in the sub region as a whole and in most of the individual member countries. |
| format | Conference Paper |
| id | CGSpace97976 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2003 |
| publishDateRange | 2003 |
| publishDateSort | 2003 |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace979762023-08-03T08:10:50Z Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. Ajala, S.O. maize technology transfer soil fertility The major thrust of the West and Central Africa Collaborative Maize Research Network (WECAMAN) has been on the development of early and extra-early maize varieties and associated agronomic practices. Adoption of these varieties and, to some extent, the complementary agronomic practices by farmers has led to the expansion of maize production in the sub region. However, the rate of adoption of the technologies has been constrained by several factors, including high price and non-availability of inputs, poor seed production and distribution, inadequate on-farm testing of available technologies, inadequate number of extension workers and poor researcher-extension farmer linkages. We discuss herein the strategy employed by WECAMAN to facilitate better adoption of the technologies. The strategy includes the commissioning of studies on alternative methods of soil management, development of community seed production schemes, use of farmer participatory methods and the production test plot (PTP) as tools to test and demonstrate new technologies, and strengthening research-extension farmer linkages. The network also funded marketing studies to document the evolution of domestic maize production and how it can be used to influence policy in WECAMAN member countries. The payoff is that during the last two decades of the 20th Century, maize production has increased dramatically in the sub region as a whole and in most of the individual member countries. 2003 2018-11-14T06:51:21Z 2018-11-14T06:51:21Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97976 en Limited Access Badu-Apraku, B., Fakorede, M.A.B. & Ajala, S. (2003). Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach. Maize revolution in West and Central Africa. Cotonou, Benin Republic. 14-18 May 2001, lbadan, Nigeria: IITA, (p.45-65). |
| spellingShingle | maize technology transfer soil fertility Badu-Apraku, Baffour Fakorede, M.A.B. Ajala, S.O. Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title | Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title_full | Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title_fullStr | Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title_full_unstemmed | Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title_short | Promoting maize technology transfer in West and Central Africa: a networking approach |
| title_sort | promoting maize technology transfer in west and central africa a networking approach |
| topic | maize technology transfer soil fertility |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97976 |
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