- L l -h - -v - -' -s- ---.1 -- * Am l ' M | q =" R llU ' = |]{-12S A A w " =n2fiZ11 AGRICULTURAL 1 1- SR C R VOLUME 4, NUMBER 3 Jutie 1997 Mali: Trees for Food Security A Lethal Cocktail for the Chickpea Life in the sandswept Sahel of West Africa is a year-long quest for food security. Podborer The region is plagued by annual droughts that last nine months, by periodic droughts that may last several years. People from Chad in the east, across to the Atlantic coast of Senegal in the west, have learned to make the best of the re- Dead crushed larvae of the sources that nature has bequeathed them. They leave scattered trees in their fields podborer pest, well mixed with wa- of sorghum, millet and maize, an agroforestry system known as 'parklands'. If ter and a stabilizer, yield a lethal cock- crops fail, or during the long dry seasons, the trees provide them with many of tail used by Indian farmers to spray their nutritional needs. their chickpea fields. So it is not surprising that when researchers set out to find out what trees A forty percent increase in chickpea people most value and why, they found that people in the Sahel most value trees yield was achieved by a group of that provide food security and generate some income. A priority-setting exercise was carried out by ICRAF scientists from the Canadian-funded Semi-Arid Low- lands of West Africa programme, together with their partners in national agricul- tural research organizations. Their surveys took them through Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso and Senegal, and the list of the top five trees in each country showed some striking similarities. Baobab appears in the list in each country; it tops the list in three countries. Its I* fruit pulp is used for porridge-making and for flavoring drinks. It is extremely (ICRISAT) based near Hyderabad. an oil or butter used in I _ k34 The podborer, the caterpillar of the cooking and as a cos- 1I" j6'r insect Helicoverpa Armigera, used to metic, which is the destroy over half the earlier harvests main ingredient in of chickpea, the most important post- many of the most ex- monsoon crop in the Medak district pensive facial cremes of Andhra Pradesh. on the international The farmers contacted ICRISAT, a market. In Burkina -. center supported by the Consultative Continued on page 14 Baobab trees (ICRAF) Continued on page 13 4W FORUM 4W Sida's Strategies for Natural Resources and the Environment By Johan Holmberg Important changes in the global development paradigm are reflected in the recent priority setting exercise of a major donor agency. CGIAR News is reprinting this analysis with the kind permission of Development Today, Oslo. The work of the Swedish International Development Co- the trend in the aid donor community in the late 1 980s and operation Agency (Sida) in the area of natural resources early 1990s when aid to agriculture declined as the com- and the environment should be seen in the context of four bined result of political pressure for environmental action policy papers adopted during 1996 and 1997 in the areas and disillusion with the performance of aid to agriculture, of sustainable develop- primarily in Africa. In this Issue ... ment, poverty, gender It is therefore reasonable to ask whether this remains the equity, and human predominant view. Is it reflected in the aforementioned pri- Mali: Trees for Food rights and democracy. orities of Sida's work with natural resources? Security ..............1 These policy papers The short answer is no. There is a gradual shift under way A Lethal Cocktail for the are closely aligned with back to agriculture in Sida's cooperation with African coun- Chickpea Podborer ...........I the politically estab- Sida's Strategies for Natural lished objectives for Resources.2 Swedish development In 1995 Sida commissioned a major review of Groundwater Sales Promote aid and set a framework its possibilities to contribute more effectively Equity ..............3 for all of Sida's opera- Bangladesh: Rice is Life ......4 tions. to African food security. Announcements .................4 It is the paper on sus- tainable development Does A Farmer's Choice of that is of most direct tries. In 1995 Sida commissioned a major review of its pos- Technologies? A ...c relevance to Sida's work sibilities to contribute more effectively to African food se- Diversgity byDesign ............5 with natural resources curity. The report, available in mid- 1996, recommended that Diversity by Design in and the environment. It Sida strengthen its professional presence in Africa in fields Bamboo Keeps Growing in specifies that priority related to food security. It also recommended more support China . .... 8 should be given to five to decentralized programs to tackle issues related to pro- Better Trials ... from the subject matter areas and ductivity in smallholder agriculture. Scrapyard .. .... 9 two cross-cutting meth- Major programs in this area are now in various stages of Information Needs of Small odological approaches, planning in Tanzania, Ethiopia, Angola and Mozambique. Scale Farmers in Africa ..... 10 namely: water resources These are all area-based programs with several different com- ICARDA at 20 ............. 13 management; sustain- ponents designed to address the multiple needs at farm level. Safety for the Seeds of the able land management, They resemble the integrated rural development programs Future .. 15 including soil conserva- of the 1970s. But there are major differences. The new pro- Cassava Boom in tion; the marine envi- grams set out to strengthen the local government adminis- Southeast Asia ....... 16 ronment; the urban trations instead of creating separate organizations. They are CGIAR Financial Concepts environment; environ- based on a bottom-up planning approach where priorities and Terminology ........ 18 mentally sound produc- for intervention are determined by the beneficiaries. They Women Dairy Farmers tion and consumption use low quantities of imported farm inputs and more em- in Africa .19 of energy; capacity phasis on locally produced, improved seeds. They all have building and institu- significant components of agricultural research. tional development; and In addition, support to international agricultural research Issued by the CGIAR Secretariat, NGOs and civil society. through CGIAR is Sida's single largest research program. 1818 H Street, NW, But what became of There are signs that this support may increase further in Washington, D.C., 20433, USA. agriculture and forestry, future years. Telephione: (1-202) 473-8913. subsumed above under So what has changed? Why does Sida now consider con- Fax: (1-202) 473-8110. "sustainable land man- ditions for success in agriculture to be more propitious in Visit the CGCAR Hoinepage on the agement?" And what Africa than in the 1980s? First, with structural adjustment Internet at: http://www.cgiar.org about fisheries? Sweden many of the economic distortions discriminating against ag- CGIAR was very much part of riculture have now been removed. Economic incentives now 2 CGIAR Continued on page 3 1W NEWS 4W Sida's Strategies Continued from page 2 exist for farmers to grow more food. Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Kenya, Laos and Promote Equity Second, there is the belief that food se- India. curity in Africa is an issue that needs In 1996 Sida decided to host the In Pakistan, as in other countries in to be tackled head-on and that improv- secretariat of the Global Water Part- South Asia, farmers who can afford it ing the environment in rural areas is not nership (GWP), a network of organi- are investing in private tubewells to as- sufficient to increase farm productiv- zations interested in the sustainable sure a supply of irrigation water when ity. Third, many of the components of development of water resources in they need it. When these farmers have these programs, such as strengthening developing countries co-sponsored by more water than they can use, they local government institutions, gaining the World Bank and UNDP. The net- sometimes sell the excess to nearby knowledge through research, and im- work is active in all fields within the relatives and neighbors. Until now, proving rural roads, are prerequisites for water sector, not only rural water sup- these informal water markets have re- future agricultural productivity in- plies, and hence forces Sida to ceived little research attention. But, as creases. And fourth, there is increasing broaden its expertise. With the water becomes more scarce and de- realization that more support to agri- Stockholm Water Symposium already graded, countries need information to cultural research is a necessary, albeit one of the major annual scientific formulate policies that improve access insufficient, precondition for future conferences on water in the world, to water resources, particularly for ten- food production increases. the planned creation of the ants and smallholders. "Groundwater Interestingly, the development has Stockholm International Water Insti- Markets in Pakistan: Participation and been similar in forestry, previously con- tute to administer the Symposium Productivity," IFPRI Research Report 105 sidered one of the high-profile areas of and to conduct research, and the by Ruth Meinzen-Dick, looks at how wa- Sweden's development assistance. It is Stockholm Environment Institute al- ter markets operate, who participates, the Sida's experience that to reduce defor- ready active in this area, Sida's in- nature of the transactions, and the effects estation rates, support to improved ag- volvement in GWP will contribute to of the markets on agricultural produc- riculture and security of tenure is of- raising the Swedish profile in water tivity and incomes. Its findings are rel- ten likely to be more effective than resources development. evant throughout South Asia. direct forestry assistance. That has lead Swedish development assistance is Private tubewells boost production to a gradual disappearance of separate declining and will in 1997 be 0.7 per by increasing farmers' control over the forestry projects. They are being inte- cent of GDP, the lowest since 1974. amount and timing of irrigation appli- grated into programs for natural re- In many areas Sida is now cutting cations, which not only improves yields source management that emphasize ag- back its programs and staff. However, but allows farmers to switch to higher- ricultural extension, provision of water the government's parliamentary bill value crops, thus increasing income. In and credit facilities. Examples of pro- directing Sida's work in 1997 singles Pakistan, farmers with more than 25 grams where this development has out natural resources management as acres are most likely to own a tubewell, been evident are found in Vietnam, the only sector (in addition to democ- whereas farmers with less than 10 acres Laos and India. racy and human rights) where Sida's are usually the buyers of groundwater. Support to fisheries development by programs should increase in scope. In In Punjab and North-West Frontier Sida has almost ceased, as the last 1995/96 this sector accounted for 13 Province, the study area, 15 percent of project is being phased out in Angola. percent of Sida's disbursements, and the farmers owned tubewells. About This is being replaced by an interest in it has remained at that level for the one-third of the owners (5 percent of coastal zone management, and a review last four years. When the programs the total sample) sold water, at least oc- of Sida's work in this area is under way. now being planned have reached ma- casionally, and 30 percent bought wa- An important new priority area for turity in a few years, this percentage ter. The report finds, however, that poli- Sida is water resources management. should increase substantially reflect- cies to encourage those with In 1996 Sida took an initiative in ing economic realities in many of the middle-sized farms (10 to 25 acres) to southern Africa with a focus mainly traditional Swedish aid recipient invest in tubewells might improve eq- on capacity building and awareness countries. uity, because such farmers may not use raising for water development. There all of the water on their own acreage, is a long Swedish experience in the Johan Holmberg is Director of the Depart- as large farmers often do, and they are area of rural water supplies and sani- ment of Natural Resources and Environment more likely to be able to finance a well tation with successful projects in sev- at Sida, and Executive Secretary of the eral countries, including Botswana, Stockholm-based Global Water Partnership. Continued on page 16 CGIAR Vf 3 PERSPECTIVES 1|f ANNOUNCEMENTS ffi Bangladesh: Rice is Life*. The new Chair of the ICRAF Board of Trustees is its former Vice Chair, Yemi Katerere, a Zimbabwean for- The demand for rice is constantly ris- To achieve such growth, a key factor ester who is Regional Director of ing in Bangladesh with nearly 2.3 mil- will be research carried out in collabo- IUCN for Southern Africa and a Di- lion people being added each year to ration with the International Rice Re- rector of the International Society of its population of about 120 million. search Institute. Bangladesh's research Tropical Foresters. Rice production increases must be link with IRRI goes back more than 30 * Enrico Porceddu, Professor of Agri- achieved at a faster rate than in most years. In 1966, the government of what cultural Genetics, University of other countries, while the land planted was then East Pakistan emphasized rice Tuscia, Italy, will be the Board Chair to rice is not expanding. In addition, research within the Cereals Section of of IITA as of May 1,1997. Bangladesh is faced with production the Agricultural Research Laboratory constraints such as drought, lack of ir- Tejgaon, Dhaka, and began collabora- * Shawki Barghouti has been selected rigation facilities, flooding and salinity tive research to test rice lines from for the position of Director General of soils, coupled with fluctuating com- IRRI. In 1967, IR8, the first widely dis- of ICRISAT. A native of Jordan, he is mercial rice prices. tributed semid- currently Chief of the Agriculture Yet, rice is cen- warf rice variety, and Water Operations Division, tral to Bangladesh's was introduced South Asian Country Department of economy and agri- To achieve such growth, a into the country. the World Bank. He will succeed culture, accounting In 1970, the James G. Ryan on September 1, 1997. for nearly 18 per- key factor will be research Bangladesh Rice a FAO initiates a program of coopera- cent of the Gross Research Institute tion with academic and research in- Domestic Product carried out in collaboration (BRRI) was estab- stitutions. FAO promotes collabora- (GDP) and provid- lished and has tion with academic and research ing about 70 per- with the International Rice worked closely institutions by giving assignments of cent of an average with IRRI ever up to one year for research or study citizen's total calo- Research Institute. since. Current ar- at FAO Headquarters or in the field. rie intake. The rice eas of collabora- Visiting experts have consultant sta- area totals about tion include: tus, and FAO covers the basic costs 10 million ha and Safeguarding of their assignment. Some 60 scien- accounts for 75 percent of the total area and preserving the biodiversity of tists have either completed or are con- of agricultural crops, and 93 percent of the genepool tinuing their assignments, and 160 the total area planted to cereals. The more have expressed interest. Cur- rice sector is by far the most important * Evaluating rice germplasm rently, some 20 countries and 4 re- provider of rural employment. * Resource management in the coastal gional and international organizations Due to the increase in population, wetland ecosystem are participating. A 19-page list of the average farm size has declined from priority areas for research collabora- 1.43 ha in 1961 to 0.87 ha in 1994. * Enhancing rainfed lowland rice pro- tion is available from Mr. Ramadhar The average rice yield remains low at ductivity in the rainfed lowland areas TCDC/ECDC, FAO Headquarters about 2.7 t/ha. Although substantial * Projecting rice supply and demand (Ramadhar@fao.org). (FAO) rice production growth was achieved during the 1976-93 period, growth * Evaluating rice seed health * KeepingWorld Food Security on the . . . .- ............ . * . ~~~~~~~Agenda: Implications for the United since then has been negligible. This is * Nitrogen supply in rice-wheat Nations and the CGIAR" is the title mainly due to continued drought in systems of a booklet by Louise 0. Fresco and flooding in parts of the country. * Developing hybrid rices. Rudy Rabbinge, published by the CGIAR Secretariat in the Issues in Future growth in rice production will To maintain self-sufficiency in rice, Agriculture Series. The paper de- have to come from expansion of irri- Bangladesh will have to continue to ex- scribes the changes needed to achieve gated areas, use of new high-yielding pand rice production by raising yields at the goals proclaimed by the 1996 varieties, more fertilizer input, and im- a rate that is at least equal to population World Food Summit: food security proved crop management practices. growth until the demand for rice has sta- and access to food for all. Copies are bilized. Although the population growth available from the CGIAR Secretariat 4 l ~~CGIARContinued on page 17 4 4 CGIAR |4 NEWS 14 RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS VI Does A Farmer's Choice of Products by Design Affect Adoption of New Dirity By Larry Harrington Technologies? Focusing research and agricultural extension services on farms of Our common goals a particular size or type is unlikely to yield greater returns than There are a number of reasons for fostering treating all farms alike, according to "Role of Farm-Level Diversifi- There arecofyremso Mor dvsersys cation in the Adoption of Modern Technology in Brazil," IFPRI Re- diversity in agroecosystems. More diverse sys- , ~~~tems take better advantage of ecological search Report 104, by Marc Nerlove, Stephen Vosti, and Wesley niches. Species adapted to different stresses Basel. The report finds that a 1 percent increase in total output will (e.g., waterlogging, soil acidity) can be posi- generate a 1 percent increase in use of modern inputs no matter tioned where they have a comparative advan- what combination of products is produced or how stable the mix. tage. Greater system diversity can also improve Supply constraints, particularly lack of credit, may largely deter- stability and resilience. Diverse mine whether a technology is adopted, and supply constraints af- ability mn resilene. Dvr fec alos all frm eqaly agroecosystems offer multiple pathways for fect almost all farms equally. energy and nutrient cycling; consequently sys- This report looks at how farmers' decisions about what crops or tem productivity is not held hostage to the livestock to produce and in what proportions are linked to technol- performance vagaries of any particular species. ogy adoption. Since technologies are usually developed with cer- When properly designed, more diverse sys- tain crops in mind, a farmer's decision to grow that crop may mean tems also can reduce problems associated with that he will adopt new technologies as well. tes asoscand pems asscatedrwith Conducted in the poor but agriculturally diverse Zona da Mata reliance on external inputs. Such diverse sys- region of Minas Gerais, Brazil, the study uses statistical cluster analy- tems may also be associated with in-situ con- sis to identify farms by their product mix. Farms, assigned to groups servation of foodgrain land races and folk va- according to the share of farm output devoted to a particular prod- rieties. uct, are divided into five categories: farms that produce coffee, corn However, agroecosystem biodiversity is not products, dairy products, and rice; off-farm labor is the fifth cat- ever, means odiving pro- egory. These categories serve as a basis for examining the factors an end in itself but a means of achieving pro- that influence adoption of new technologies such as the size and ronmental quality, and the conservation of scale of operation of a farm, its expenditure on modern inputs, its 1 r . 1. . r 1 } 1. . r . . 1 1 ~~~crop genetic diversity. These in turn are part degree of specialization (the diversity of its agricultural products), of larger societal goals-sustainable food se- and the quality of its land. Despite varying agroecological condi- curity, reduced poverty, and improved public tions, farmers can readily change their product mix among coffee, health. corn, and dairy products, and off-farm labor, but rice requires flat, Societies also value natural biological diver- irrigated land. sity in the broader sense. People are concerned The study finds that farmers' decisions about changing product about the possible extinction of species be- mix are influenced by price policies and the agricultural extension services available, which vary from product to product. Many farm- role in ecological balances, and simply because ers in the Zona da Mata grew coffee because input and output prices people place a value m their continued exist- were subsidized and preferential credit terms were available. The eope pegarvle in the continedist size and timing of investments and returns for different products ence, regardless of future human benefits. also influenced farmers' choices. Kinds of diversity The study also looks at the long-term stability of product mix. Agroecosystem biodiversity can be under- Thirty-five percent of the farms were stable, staying in the same stood in several different ways: cluster for six years; 31 percent were marginally stable, changing Crop genetic diversity. This embraces such clusters only once in a single year; and 29 percent were "jumpers," factors as varietal concentration; pace of vari- switching from one cluster to another during the period. Farmers etal change over time; genetic similarity among who maintained a stable product mix or jumped to coffee produc- major cultivars; the conservation and tion tended to be better off than the other farmers. But even the pyramiding of favorable genes in breeders' poorest farmers showed a willingness to make changes in response varieties; the conservation and use of impor- to economic and other incentives. 'IFPRI) Contintied on page 6 CGIAR f 5 Diversity ile areas, or to clear new forest areas emphasize the plot or farm community Continued from page 5 for agriculture. System diversity may be level of analysis, ignoring higher levels. broadened by increasing crop genetic They succumb to the "fallacy of scale," diversity, expanding crop species diver- in which something that appears un- tant genes present in folk varieties, land sity over space and time, fostering crop- sustainable at one level of analysis may races, and wild relatives; and opportu- livestock interactions, or improving be a strong element in favor of nities for expanding crop genetic diver- productivity in favored agricultural ar- sustainability at a higher level. sity through wide crosses and biotech- eas to protect biologically diverse frag- An example of "fallacy of scale" nology. ile, marginal, or forested areas from Crop species diversity over space. Spa- agriculture. Green Revolution technologies for tial species diversity may be exceed- . rice and wheat in South Asia often have tingly species diversiy may mped e ced- Sustainability in perspective been criticized as unsustainable. At the ingly narrow (e.g., a monocropped rice field) or exceedingly broad (e.g., a Partly because they are thought to agroecosystem level, these technologies home garden featuring simultaneous be closely linked to issues of biological may feature low species diversity, high cultivation of fruit trees, banana plants, diversity, sustainability issues are com- reliance on external inputs and energy coffee, spices, and several food crops). manding more attention from agricul- sources, and environmental pollution Plots with low species diversity and tural scientists. Many agree that the from pesticides and fertilizers. How- high species diversity often are found ability to quantify sustainability is fun- ever, at higher levels of analysis, the within the same farming system. damental to making the concept use- diffusion of Green Revolution tech- Crop species diversity over time. Tem- ful. Unfortunately little progress has nologies in parts of South Asia has been poral species diversity may be narrow been made in this regard. associated with accelerated economic (e.g., one maize monocrop crop per Most commonly, indicators of development in Bangladesh; higher in- year, every year); broad within a year sustainability are narrowly driven by comes through employment generation (e.g., an annual sequence of multiple definitions. This often leads to argu- in Uttar Pradesh; improvements in in- cropping involving cereals, legumes, ments that are merely circular. For ex- come distribution in Pakistan; reduced and horticultural crops); or broad over ample: population growth in Green Revolu- severalyears(e.g.,rice-potato-wheat definedintermsofzeroexterntion areas of India-and, not least, the several years (e.g., rice-ptt-heat *If agroecosystem sustainability is saving of approximately 40 million ha patterns, broken every few years by a defined in terms of zero external in- from the plow (or woodcutter's ax) in sugarcane crop). Crop species diversity put use, then any technical change India alone. Without the Green Revo- over space and over time are not nec- leading to reduced external input use lution technologies, India would have essarily related. can be said to foster sustainability. needed another 40 million ha of rice crop-livestock interactions. The presence * If agroecosystem sustainability is and wheat area to meet foodgrain de- of livestock in a system tends to greatly defined in terms of low levels of en- mand. enhance the value of non-crop compo- vironmental pollution, then any The Green Revolution played a vir- nents (crop residues, grazing lands, for- technical change leading to less en- tually unrecognized role in reducing est resources) and typically features vironmental pollution can be said to pressure to cultivate biologically di- nutrient cycling between rangeland and foster sustainability. verse fragile, marginal, or forested ar- crop land, thus fostering improved pro- * If agroecosystem sustainability is eas In the absence of the Green Revo- ductivity and sustainability of cropping defined in terms of high lution, food prlces would have been systems and a higher potential for spa- agroecosystem biodiversity, then any higher, employment growth (especially tial and temporal crop species. technical change leading to higher off-farm employment) would have Natural biodiversity within agroecosystem biodiversity can be been slower, poverty more widespread, agroecosystems. More diverse said to foster sustainability. and population growth more rapid- agroecosystems-particularly those exacerbating the threat to natural bio- with greater spatial diversity, and those If agroecosystem sustainability is de- logical diversity. with trees-may provide habitat for a fined in terms of local self-reliance in So, at a higher level of analysis, re- wider array of wildlife. agricultural production (i.e., avoidance source degradation and environmental Natural biodiversity as indirectly af- of international markets), then any pollution in Green Revolution areas has fected by agroecosystems. Highly produc- technical change leading to greater lo- been a cost associated with defusing tive agroecosystems can indirectly fos- cal self-reliance can be said to foster longer-term threats to resource quality ter natural biodiversity by making it sustainability. and natural biological diversity in bio- unnecessary to farm marginal or frag- All of these definitions, and their logically diverse fragile, marginal, or corresponding indicators, are inad- forested areas. Researchers and farm- equate-even when combined. They 6 40i CGIAR Conztinued on page 7 Diversity riod sensitive rice varieties). In Africa, market signals that would induce farm- Continued from page 6 the emphasis has been less on intensi- ers to diversify into cash crops. Not by fication and more on reconciling food coincidence, "diversification out of grain security and system sustainability re- production" is not high on the south- ers must reduce this cost. Plot-level quirements. Even in Africa, however, ern Africa research and policy agenda. threats to sustainability in Green Revo- diversity has been a major theme in Success in demand-led diversification lution areas must be addressed. The FSR. "Diversity by design" also has been is sensitive to the policy environment, challenge is to generate a "doubly green characteristic of research on requiring: revolution" that maintains the power- agroecology. * an overall policy environment that ful and favorable indirect consequences The lessons learned from FSR and encourages more flexible and of highly productive agricultural tech- research on agroecology have vastly broader cropping systems rather nology, while improving resource qual- improved researchers' capacity to work than commodity-support programs; ity and reducing pollution. with farmers in understanding and im- Sustainability is not enough-produc- proving farming systems. However, * laws and institutions that facilitate tivity must increase as well. these lessons have not led to wide- efficient marketing by establishing spread adoption of more diverse, pro- grades and standards for different Diversity by design ductivity-enhancing resource-conserv- commodities and developing and Greater agroecosystem biodiv- ing agricultural systems. Work is distributing farm inputs; ersity-particularly crop genetic diver- urgently needed to improve the effec- * public investment in physical and sity and spatial and temporal species. tiveness of research (measured by wide- social infrastructure, communica- diversity-often can help achieve sus- spread adoption) aimed at designing tions, and information systems; and tainable improvements in agricultural such agricultural systems. Until then, a rural financial system that mobi- system productivity. How, then, do we the path of "diversity by design" is un- lizes rural savings, makes credit avail- foster widespread use of more biologi- likely to help achieve our common able to traders, and diversifies the cally diverse agroecosystems? There are goals. rural economy; and at least two ways: Demand-led diversification * training and education to prepare Diversity by design-Researchers The path of "demand-led diversifica- rural people for non-agricultural d fverse agroecosystems, whichall tion" is relatively indirect but has in- jobs. widely adoptedoystemsn chmare duced widespread change in farming Demand-led diversification will lead nities. This process includes partici- systems, particularly in Asia. Indonesia to more bologcally dverse agro- patory research on indigenous tech- provides a classic example. Increased tosmo a lly aggregate (e.g. re- rice productivity in favored lowland nical knowledge about system areas expanded the supply of rice and gional) level but may not ensure in- diversity, with a view to extrapolat- reduced its price. Marginal rice areas, creased biodiversity at the plot or farm ing such knowledge to comparable often on hillsides, became unprofitable level. Moreover, plot-level trends in areas. often in thes, ceca e pro - resource quality, external input use, and and farmers in these areas ceased pro- eniomna polto myices * Demand-led diversification-Higher ducing rice. However, higher incomes ecrease,tin accordan itprac- incomes and reduced poverty gen- in rural and urban areas-largely result- tices adopted as farmers learn to man- erated by more productive agricul- ing from improved rice productivity age a new set of enterprises. The path tural practices shift the structure of and lower rice prices-shifted the of aned diversio. T," oits food demand towards a more diverse structure of demand for food towards of aled diveato on its array of products, such as fruits, veg- fruits and vegetables. Partly as a conse- men, o our common goals. etables, and animal products. Farm- quence, farmers in hillside areas ers follow market signals and diver- switched from growing rice to peren- Complementarity and sify their farming systems. nial fruit trees. The same process is evi- competition The path of "diversity by design" is dent in other areas where new tech- As noted earlier, the goals of sustain- direct. It is the path taken by cropping nology has increased the productivity able food security, reduced poverty, systems and farming systems research of basic grain production, for instance improved public health, and conserva- (FSR). In Asia such research sought to in the Indian Punjab. tion of natural biological diversity will diversify and intensify cropping pat- In contrast, stagnating grain (maize) be attained through widespread use of terns by introducing a second non-rice productivity in southern Africa pro- more productive, stable, resilient crop into rice-based systems (an alter voked a chronic food security crisis, the native made possible by the introduc- expansion of maize cultivation into Continued on page 8 tion of short-duration, non-photope- wildlife areas, and a relative absence of CGIAR 7 Diversity Continued from page 7 tition, but of complementarity. It is not posal-following all promising paths- a case of "Green Revolution" vs. "alter- to reach our common goals. native agriculture," or "diversity by de- agroecosystems and the conservation of sign" vs. "demand-led diversification." Larry Harrington is Manager, Natural Re- crop genetic diversity. We must use all of the tools at our dis- This will require an emphasis on sus- tainable productivity improvement in favored areas-to reduce pressure to cultivate biologically diverse areas un- I N NEWS suited to agriculture, foster "demand- led diversification," and lead to thea bo "i ~"1 "doubly green revolution" described Bamboo Keeps Growing in China previously. Agricultural research and develop- A joint study by the Chinese Academy of Forestry (CAF), the International Net- ment-scientists, extension workers, work for Bamboo and Rattan (INBAR), and CIFOR has examined the impacts of farmentrsciendtpoistsy exteikers-n hnational policy changes on the bamboo sector in Anji County, Zhejiang Province, farmers, and policy makers-can help where bamboo has a long tradition and is important in the local economy. The pur- through: cereal varieties that are more tolerant to biotic and abiotic stresses pose was to investigate the potential contribution of bamboo cultivation, harvesting and processing to rural development, given an appropriate policy and economic envi- and use nutrients more efficiently; pro- ronment. The project has compiled general county-level information and details on ductivity-enhancing resource-conserv- 200 households and dozens of industries. ing crop management practices such as Preliminary analysis shows that a series of policy changes have cleared the main integrated pest management (IPM) or bottlenecks in the sector, providing the incentives and opportunities to intensify pro- reduced tillage; and more effective "di- duction of raw material with little increase in land area, and to diversify production versity by design" through adoption of towards increased shoot output. Because the changes were implemented gradually, new cropping patterns, farming sys- and frequently tested on a small scale, major disruptions have been avoided. Success tems, and land management systems and a smooth transition have been facilitated by a sequence that has moved initially (featuring staple cereals) that capital- from reforming the production of raw material to subsequent changes in marketing, ize on the advantages of system diver- processing and foreign trade. The bamboo sector is currently experiencing a big ex- sity to sustainably improve productiv- pansion in China to meet the demand of both its huge internal market and increasing ity. exports. The next stage in the research will try to characterize different situations by Sustainable productivity improve- selecting important bamboo production counties ranging from the more developed ment in marginal, fragile areas-ac- Zhejiang in the east to the central province of Hunan, to the western, less-developed knowledging that we can reduce but province of Sichuan. The general situation in the counties is characterized by an unmet not eliminate pressure to cultivate bio- demand for raw bamboo resources from different processing industries, leading to logically diverse areas unsuited to agri- intensification and, wherever possible, expansion of bamboo plantations. The private culture-would again require varieties, management of bamboo under the "household responsibility system" is now well es- crop management practices, cropping tablished and the industry is working under a basically market economy system, with patterns, farming systems, and land some checks and balances from the State. management systems that can offer le- Each county displays special features related to the extension, type and intensity of verage points. bamboo management and, even more so, to the type of associated processing industry. As "demand-led diversification" takes Daoming township (Sichuan province) produces bamboo mainly for labor-intensive hold, scientists, extension workers, handicrafts. It is grown mostly around farmers' houses. In Muchuan (Sichuan prov- farmers, and policy makers must foster ince), severely degraded slopes have been recovered by planting bamboo and the prod- sustainable management strategies. A uct is mainly used for pulp and paper. Bamboo area has increased 400 percent in 15 greater temporal and spatial diversity years. Policies to encourage intensification, coupled with long-term contracts under g reaterp r oes . the household responsibility system, have promoted the planting of bamboo in place of enterprises does not necessarily im- ply improved sustainability. New fruit of Chinese fir in Taojiang county (Hunan province). One of the areas with the highest income from bamboo is Linan county (Zhejiang province) which specializes in ham- and vegetable crops can exacerbate or boo shoot production. Average yearly household income from bamboo shoots, in vil- ameliorate problems of erosion, soil lages specializing in bamboo shoots, amounts to US$2,500, with some above fertility loss, water-induced land deg- US$ 10,000. By examining the situations in each of these counties, the project seeks to radation, external input dependence, or characterize the favorable conditions which improve the livelihoods of the Chinese environmental pollution. bamboo farmers and expand the possibilities for their bamboo production. In the end, it is not a case of compe- (CIFOR) 8 4 CGIAR Better Trials...from the Scrapyard By Mike Robbins It started with Hassan Ouabbou of France's Institut de la ology, Stephen Hales, in 1727. Perhaps we should use the in- Recherche Agronomique (INRA). Some time ago he travelled digenous knowledge of the scientific community..." around Morocco with cereals plant physiologist John Peacock The stimulus for the next move came from Ouabbou. If it of ICARDA. The two men talked long and hard about the had been possible to simulate heat-stress in seedlings, and find problems of breeding wheat for heat stress. Hassan Ouabbou out why their growth was stopping, could not the same be was at that time working on his PhD thesis at Kansas State done for the grain-filling stage? The problem was that Mo- University in the United States. It was titled Physiological as- rocco, and the other North African countries, had a special pects of recovery and evaluation of wheat during high tempera- constraint, the sirocco. ture stress, an appropriate field for a scientist in a country where "We're not just talking about heat here," says Peacock. "Hassan drought and heat can be devastating. and I wondered if the aridity of this wind was a factor. It's Ouabbou, who is in the Agronomy Department at INRA's important to find out, because there are at least two stresses regional center at Settat, described how, in certain conditions, that could be stopping the growth at that stage. We need to growth in cereals completely stopped at the grain-filling stage. know what it is, so that eventually we will be able to map It was not clear why. What was needed was a way of simulat- genes for thermotolerance." ing heat stress so that the problem could be studied and sources The first possible cause would be overheating of the leaves of resistance found. and their photosynthetic apparatus. "What happens is that a The challenge had a familiar ring to it. John Peacock had combination of heat and aridity could disrupt the plant's cool- been working on the simulation of heat stress and its effects ing system. The plant then stops producing energy or photo- on seedling development. In some conditions, seedling devel- synthates. opment simply stopped, and Peacock wondered what was "But what about, again, a blockage between source and sink?" really happening. He had got together with ICARDA engi- When the plant reaches the grain-filling stage, explains Pea- neer Peter Eichhorn and Mahalakshmi, a visiting scientist from cock, the head which is producing seeds is now the sink and ICRISAT in India, and together they modified a system which there is a heavy demand for the 'fuel supply'. It is possible, he Peacock had developed earlier at the University of Arizona says, that once again the proteins are coagulating because of for subjecting seedlings to this type of stress. sheer heat stress, accentuated by the failure of the plant's air- These experiments, and earlier ones in Arizona and India, conditioning system.. "If this is the case, the aridity of the si- proved successful. "What we found was that heat shock pre- rocco is not a factor. The only way to find out is to perform vented the products of photosynthesis from reaching the root trials in the field which test for performance under heat and system," he explains. "Put simply, a plant has two basic parts wind and aridity." Hence the need for a machine which could to it. One is the source and the other is the sink. The source simulate heat, wind speed and relative humidity. In the field! develops energy; the sink uses it. In extreme heat, the prod- The problem was put to Peter Eichhorn, who built a proto- ucts- carbohydrates- find their journey between source and type. Hassan Ouabbou came from Morocco to assist with its sink blocked, possibly by proteins which coagulate in the development. They were joined by Mohamed Iskandar from phloem as a result of the high temperatures and block the Egypt; an agronomist, who carries out research for the Egyp- sieve plates. tian national program in the Northern Sinai. Egypt also faces "The circumstances under which this coagulation occurs is fierce onshore winds between Marsa Matrouh and El Arish. genetically governed. This means that we can look for sources His visit was arranged by ICARDA's Nile Valley and Red Sea of resistance; that is, either a higher coagulation temperature Regional Project (NVRSRP). or something that stops blockage." The four-man team made some modifications to the origi- While doing this research, Peacock found that the prin- nal machine. Hassan Ouabbou wanted a machine that would ciple of growth stopping because of a blockage between source function in the field. The design that emerged burns diesel-oil and sink had a long time ago been described by others. "Cut a to heat water, which is then circulated through a truck radia- ring of bark off a tree and it will die, but not at once. That's tor. A truck fan driven by an electric motor blows through this because the bark provides a route between source and sink. and sends a pretty good sirocco down through a plastic tunnel, When it is removed and the route is blocked, the tree roots in which a sprinkler system is calibrated to simulate different starve and eventually die. Before that happens, a bulge will levels of relative humidity. Electricity is needed to run the elec- develop at the edge of the cut bark. That's the products of tric motors for the fan and circulation pump, but the power photosynthesis trying to get through. consumption is low, so that a small generator can be used to "This phenomenon was, in fact, observed by Marcello run one or more machines in the field. Malphighi in 1675 and by the father of modern plant physi- Continued on page 14 CGIAR'Vi 9 I vfi FORUM 4i Information Needs of Small Scale Farmers in Africa: The Nigerian Example By Vincent Nnamdi Ozowa Over the years, deliberate, though information needs are. as pest hazards, weed control, moisture ineffective efforts have been made by Nigerian farms are classified into insufficiency, soil fertility, farm credit, donors and African countries to bring small scale, medium scale and large labor shortage, soil erosion and so forth. about agricultural development with- scale. When judged by international The information needs may be out much to show for it. Much of the standards whereby all farms less than grouped into five headings: agricultural failure can be attributed to the adapted 10.00 hectares are classed as small, then inputs; extension education; agricul- transformation approach to agriculture 94.37 percent of all farm holdings in tural technology; agricultural credit; which is characterized by the introduc- Nigeria in 1973/74 (or 28 million hold- and marketing. Modern farm inputs are tion of a wide variety of large scale ings) must be classified as small scale needed to raise small farm productiv- farming and processing technologies. It farms while the remaining 5.63 percent ity. These inputs may include fertiliz- is however gratifying to note that there or 1.7 million are medium scale hold- ers, improved variety of seeds and seed- is now a shift in emphasis from the big ings. lings, feeds, plant protection chemicals, scale transformation approach to the A small scale farmer depends on his agricultural machinery, and equipment small scale improvement strategy ap- efficiency in the utilization of basic and water. An examination of the fac- proach which is attuned to African age- production resources available to him tors influencing the adoption and con- long farm practice. or her. He/she makes a significant and tinued use of these inputs will show The failure can also be attributed to important contribution to the national that information dissemination is a very the treatment of information delivery product, i.e. 99 percent of total crops important factor. It is a factor that re- as a matter of course by most African output. The small scale farmer is the quires more attention than it now gets. governments. As often happens, agri- main producer of 98 per cent of the cultural information is not integrated food consumed in Nigeria with the only Extension Education with other development programs to exception of wheat. The general lack of awareness among address the numerous related problems Experience has shown that small small scale farmers can be attributed that face farmers. Information is an es- farms outyield large farms on calorie to their high level of illiteracy. This con- sential ingredient in agricultural devel- output per hectare and are therefore tributes to the low level of adoption of opment programs but Nigerian farm- more efficient. Even though small scale agricultural production technology. ers seldom feel the impact of farmers' accessibility to agricultural Extension is a type of education agricultural innovations either because innovations is often limited by unfavor- which is functional rather than formal. they have no access to such vital infor- able economic, socio-cultural and in- It is better provided by extension work- mation or because it is poorly dissemi- stitutional conditions, they have ers whose main task is to convey infor- nated. The information provided is ex- achieved some level of efficiency mation in a meaningful form to farm- clusively focused on policy makers, through deployment of their indig- ers. One of the ways they do this is by researchers, and those who manage enous knowledge. If provided with the training a group of model farmers with policy decisions with scant attention right inputs, feasible technology and the hope that such farmers come in paid to the information needs of the relevant information, they are capable contact with other farmers. This "trickle targeted beneficiaries of the policy de- of transforming traditional agriculture. down effect" is particularly necessary cisions. The non-provision of agricul- . because farmers outnumber available tural information is a key factor that Informatlon Needs of Small extension workers with the present ra- has greatly limited agricultural devel- tio of 1:3000. opment in developing countries. No one can categorically claim to If the approaches to agricultural de- know all the information needs of farm- Agricultural Technology velopment programs are to work, Afri- ers especially in an information depen- Agricultural technology for the small can governments need to take new ap- dent sector like agriculture where there scale farmer must help minimize the proaches to information dissemination are new and rather complex problems drudgery or irksomeness of farm chores. and management that grow out from a facing farmers every day. It is safe to It should be labor-saving, labor-enhanc- clear understanding of what farmers assert that the information needs of ing and labor-enlarging. Nigerian small scale farmers revolve 10 ffi CG IAR around the resolution of problems such Continued on page 11 10 'V&'CGIAR aon h eouino rbessc Information Needs collecting and processing market data ers and by the broadcasting media. A Continued from page 10 systematically and continuously, and of lot still has to be done in this area. Some making it available to market partici- of those in charge of market informa- pants in a form relevant to their deci- tion are not trained for the job. The farmer needs information on sion making. Market information needs Agricultural Information production technology that involves of small scale farmers include: Dissemination cultivating, fertilizing, pest control, * Information on product planning. W t weeding and harvesting. This sort of This is information on what crop and Whthen the past two decades there information is at the moment being variety to grow at a given season with in te area of research activnties diffused by extension workers, other marketability of such a crop as an unithe area of agriculture in Nigerian farmers, government parastatals and important deciding factor. universities and agricultural research agricultural equipment dealers. The centers located around the country. Far impact is yet to be felt. * Information on current prices. reaching innovations that are capable of boosting the small scale farmer's ag- Agricultural Credit * Information on forecast of market ricultural production and Nigeria's eco- Agricultural credit encompasses all nomic development have been discov- loans and advances granted borrowers ered. The yam minisett technique, to finance and service production ac- Small scale farmers are among protein rich soyabean production and tivities relating to agriculture, fisheries utilization techniques, production and and forestry and also for processing, the potential beneficiaries of use of animal vaccines and drugs and marketing, storage and distribution of labor saving devices are some of the products resulting from these activities. agricultural credit in Nigeria many improved agricultural innova- Small scale farmers are among the . tions not properly diffused. Prominent potential beneficiaries of agricultural but because of their low level among the agricultural centers are the credit in Nigeria but because of their of literacy they are mostly International Institute for Tropical Ag- low level of literacy they are mostly riculture (IITA), the National Root unaware of existing loan facilities. To unaware of existing loan Crops Research Institute, the National reap the benefit of credit, farmers need Veterinary Research Institute and the information relating to sources of loan facilities, three universities of agriculture. such as names of lenders, location and Unfortunately, most of the these in- types of existing credit sources. They sists farmers in planning their mar- novations do not reach the farmer's typeslss fireldrhs is becausen ther mediu fr 11^ . need information on the terms of loans ket products. inlf. Thins dis ecause tne medium u or such as the interest rates, loanable information dissemiation in use are amount and mode of repayment. * Information on sales timing. This not quite effective. Information regarding agricultural assists farmers in ensuring that they Present Situation credit gets to small scale farmers usu- do not cause a market glut. It en- ally through channels such as relations, ables them to stagger harvesting and Institutional and governmental or- friends, neighbors, government officials, quantity for marketing. gans have been put in place to ensure commercial and credit banks. Grassroot * Information on improved marketing that farmers get to know and adopt organs such as village heads and local practices. It includes information on agricultural innovations relevant to government officials are used to diffuse improved harvesting methods. This thenr situations, e.g. the Agricultural such information because of their per- information is disseminated by field E xtension and Research Liaisosn Ser- sonal touch with small scale farmers. level extension workers by dvices (AERLS), the extension services Extension agents need to intensify their stration on farmer's fields, at local of the Agricultural Development efforts in educating farmers to increase and wholesale markets. Project (ADPs), Manistries of Agricul- their level of awareness. ture at both state and federal levels, Information on group marketing. Media Forum for Agriculture, Coopera- Marketing This enables small scale farmers to tive Extension Centres (CEC) of uni- All business activities involved in the have organized sales of marketable versities and public enlightenment movement of commodities from pro- surplus and bulk transport of pro- units of the 18 agricultural research duction to consumption is marketing. duce. centers. These bodies serve as facilita- The farmer's market information needs In Nigeria, agricultural market infor- tors of agricultural messages by acting are those that enable him make ratio- mation to small scale farmers is pro- as communication departments. nal and relevant decisions. Market in- vided by the Ministry of Agriculture Continued on page 12 formation services have the function of through the field level extension work- CI1 CGIAR as I Information Needs Problems of Agricultural English instead of the local language. Continued from page 11 Information Dissemination When local language is used, emphasis There are some limiting factors and is often on the three major Nigerian apparent constraints in agricultural in- languages Hausa, Ibo and Yoruba. They use media such as leaflets, formation dissemination in Nigeria, These programs are broadcast when newsletters, posters, exhibits, visual aids including status differences between farmers are far away in the fields or and radio programs in communicating extension agents and their clients; too tired to listen after the day's toil. A agricultural information. Radio and agents' inadequate knowledge of "how majority of the farmers do not own ra- television programs are popular al- communication works"; lack of inter- dio sets. though controlled by government with agency cooperation both in program Well intentioned agricultural pro- its attendant problems regarding the planning and implementation; and the grams can be marred by poor imple- choice of programs. extension's general lack of interest in mentation and too much bureaucracy. Of all the existing channels of agri- traditional media. For example, the Cooperative Exten- cultural communication, Nigerian One of the obvious constraints in the sion Centre of the University of Agri- farmers rank extension highest in terms use of the broadcasting media in Ni- culture, Makurdi, has a competent of providing credible information and corps of subject specialists without ad- advice, especially on agricultural tech- equate funding, facilities and logistic nology. A major function of extension Leaflets and newsletters support like visual aids, equipment, is to get the farmer into a frame of mind transportation and adequate commu- and attitude conducive to acceptance as message carriers are of nication channels. As a result, the Cen- of technological change. The use of fer- tre has not been able to achieve the tilizers, for example, is fairly widespread limited use in reaching expected impact on the immediate in the middlebelt region of Nigeria university community. where information about fertilizers is illiterate farmers. The present ratio of lextension well diffused. Even though the demand worker to 3,000 farmers is inadequate for fertilizers is buoyant, the supply is for effective agricultural information mostly inadequate to meet the de- geria is poor reception quality and the diffusion. The problem is compounded mands. area covered. The messages carried are by the paucity of women among ex- Apart from the use of extension for not tailored to the information needs tension agents especially in a society diffusion of agricultural innovation, of rural populations. Even when the where cultural and religious taboos other channels like rural development information is relevant, it is seldom make it impossible for male extension field staff, contact farmers, school aired at the proper time and so does workers to reach women farmers who teachers, private sector agri-business not get to the targeted audience. outnumber male small scale farmers. people, staff of the Ministry of Agri- Another major constraint is the use Many people in extension are ill-pre- culture and the electronic and print of print media: Leaflets and newslet- pared for extension and an extension media are used. These channels have ters as message carriers are of limited communication job. The emphasis in their strengths and weaknesses. use in reaching illiterate farmers. Tech- their training is more on technical pro- To strengthen the efforts of the print nical language used in communicating ficiency rather than on rhetorical and and broadcasting media in ensuring informationisincomprehensibletothe persuasive skills. An extensionist proper agricultural information dis- farmers. trained in this way, is unlikely to make semination to farmers, the Media Fo- Another major constraint to agricul- an impact on a conservative farmer who rum for Agriculture, was formed by tural information dissemination is the is not likely to put his farm inputs to media practitioners from all over Ni- inadequacy of existing extension pro- risk by trying the extensionist's im- geria in 1989 with the aim of provid- grams. Some of these programs are con- proved technique. There is real need for ing better support for agriculture by ceived without well thought out plans extension agents training to be relevant improving the quality of agriculture and are prepared in a hurry without the to their jobs at the grassroot. coverage in the media. farmers whose attitudes are to be Again, the targeted audience is not changed making any input. Such agri- V. N. Ozowa is Senior Librarian at the Uni- properly reached as the main benefi- cultural information packages can nei- versity of Agriculture, Makurdi, Nigeria. An ciaries of information carried by the ther sustain the farmers' interest nor earlier version of this article was published print and broadcasting media are urban effect the desired attitudinal change. by the Quarterly Bulletin of the International elites. Farmers' interests are disregarded even Association of Agricultural Information Spe- elltes. Farmers mterests are a1sregaruea even cialists IAALD/CABI (v. 40, no 1, 1995) more as most of the agricultural inno- wichihas given kd snto re print vations are written and broadcast in 12 CGIAR Podborer on this cheap and effective package," [, Continued from page I says one of the Kappadu farmers, Narasa Reddy. "We observed that Group on International Agricul- friendly birds only visit plots that _ tural Research (CGIAR), through the were not sprayed with chemical or Deccan Development Society, ahlocl t botanical insecticide, but they are in- 9 * C Deccan Development Society, a local. i . .' ~~tensely active on the plots sprayed aPwr', non-governmental organization. Ten t a on t plt s E with NPV where they feed on dead > i . ;; on-farm trials of alternative podborer ht tk, . e o t ! control ethods ere conucted b larvae that they can easily pick off the I-,,r j,R|,5-. control methods were conducted by * * _plants." , -> farmers in Kappadu village, together Bawtsy CIA ilcn with ICRISAT scientists. Bhagwat says ICRISAT will con- tinue the on-farm research in the next 13t $ 6 The trials involved a conventional t t oa e cn e chemical insecticide, a botanical in- season. More farmers need to be trained to prepare and use their own i secticide derived from the domestic traie to prepae an use_their ond neem tree, and the nuclear polyhe- s a p o a environmentally benign technology. . i (ICRISAT) rI.A ICRISAT "On-farm experiments have clearly shown the efficacy ICARDA at 20 of this approach..." On Monday, June 2, the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas, based in Aleppo, Syria, will celebrate its 20th anniversary: an occasion to proudly review the scientific achievements and services rendered drosis virus (NPV), a natural enemy to the countries of West Asia and North Africa, as well as to confront the of the podborer. The NPV particles challenge of rapidly rising food demand on top of a huge grain gap in an areuingeed b v they vora- agricultural ecoregion characterized by environmentalfragility and widespread ciously feed on the sprayed chickpea ral pvry leaves. ~~~~~~~~rural poverty. leaves. The dying larvae are full of brown ICARDA's mission is to meet the challenge posed by a harsh, stressful, liquid which contains the virus par- and variable environment in which the productivity of winter rainfed ticles and are collected for the cock- agricultural systems must be increased to higher sustainable levels; in tail which should be sprayed at sun- which soil degradation must be arrested and possibly reversed, and in set because the virus is inactivated by which the quality of the environment needs to be assured. ICARDA meets sunlight. this challenge through research, training, and dissemination of informa- Vitthal R. Bhagwat is leading a tion in partnership with the national agricultural research and develop- team of ICRISAT entomologists that ment systems. developed an integrated pest manage- The Center has a world responsibility for the improvement of barley, ment package consisting of an im- lentil, and faba bean, and a regional responsibility in West Asia and North proved chickpea variety, the botani- Africa for the improvement of wheat, chickpea, forage and pasture crops- cal insecticide, and the NPV cocktail. with emphasis on rangeland improvement and small ruminant manage- "On-farm experiments have clearly ment and nutrition-and of the farming systems associated with them. shown the efficacy of this approach," The full scope of ICARDA's activities can be appreciated only when ac- says Bhagwat of the new, eco-friendly count is taken of the cooperative research carried out with many coun- and low-cost technology readily tries in West Asia and North Africa. adopted by the farmers who had been The results of research are transferred through cooperation with na- trained to monitor pheromone traps, tional and regional research institutions, with universities and ministries count the larval population per plant, of agriculture, and through the technical assistance and training that the and determine the right stage to ap- ply the NPV. They learned how to Center provides. A range of training programs is offered and these efforts mix the cocktail and decided to ap- are supported by seminars, publications, and specialized information ser- ply three sprays at weekly intervals. vices. "We did not believe when we were told about it but now we can count CGIARl 13 Better Trials Continued from page 9 "It's a line-source system," says John Peacock. "This is familiar to anyone who's ever seen water-use efficiency trials. Basically, you have the pipe that is the water source running at a right angle to your plots so that you create a gradient of water away from the source. The sirocco simulator will do the same with air." The machine is being calibrated with the help of data on wind speed and relative humidity for Morocco supplied by Hassan Ouabbou. The temperature data was collected by ICARDA agroclimatologist Wolfgang Goebel. The data being used stretches back over thirty years. The next step will be for John Peacock and Peter Eichhorn to thoroughly field-test the machine before the Mk II version is developed in North Africa. The simulator should not only answer Peacock's questions about the actual physiological process of heat-stress at grain-filling. It should also speed up breeding trials. Droughts in the Maghreb are all too frequent, but they do not happen every year and it follows that testing for drought-resistance has hitherto been a longish process. The simulator is also a piece of appropriate technology which national programs will be able to build for themselves. The second prototype had a notional cost of around 2,500 US-Dollars, but this was because an expensive type of boiler was used; it just happened to be available. A more normal heat source would be an ordinary domestic diesel-burning water-heater, of a type which is in common use all over the Maghreb and Mashreq regions. The motor for the fan came from an old high-pressure pump, the fan and radiator from a scrapped generator. As for the fuel, diesel is sometimes subsidized in the region; in Syria, for example, it is markedly cheaper than ordinary petroleum. As head of ICARDA's workshop, Peter Eichhorn is well used to being asked for this sort of solution. He and his staff have helped develop appropriate technology for (for example) seed sweepers and pod-threshers, designed for use directly by farmers; some of this machinery has been put into production by an engineering company in Aleppo. "National programs are often short of funds," he says, "and this can be a constraint to research work. Machines like the simulator can greatly reduce this constraint. It's not a miracle solution; certain standards have to be observed, for example accuracy of temperature and consistency of wind- speed, and there will always be one or two components that can't come from the scrapyard. Even so, this is something national programs can put together for themselves. (ICARDA) Trees Continued from page 1 pungent spice used in sauces through- rind (Tamarindus indica), Ziziphus out the region. This soumbala season- mauritiana, Lannea microcarpa, Balan- Faso, guests will often find sheanut but- ing, sold as balls of brown paste, can ites aegyptica, Diospyros mespilifonnis, ter soap in their hotel rooms. This tree, easily be tracked down by its remark- Cordyla pinnata and Faidherbia albida, difficult to propagate at the moment, able smell that is almost synonymous all of which provide products and is an important source of income with Sahelian markets. The yellow consumables for people and for live- throughout the Sahel and south into powder in the pod is consumed raw or stock as well. These results, according the savannas of northern Ghana and as porridge. Domestication of this tree to Elias Ayuk of ICRAF, show that Nigeria. is particularly urgent because the fruits farmers most prefer species that pro- A third tree, Parkia biglobosa (nere are collected when they are still hang- vide food security as well as a wide in francophone countries and dawa- ing and few seeds are able to germi- range of products. dawa in anglophone areas), produces nate. In coming months, he reports, spe- brown seeds that are ground into a Other important trees include tama- cialists from ICRAF and national agri- cultural research organizations will be assessing the value of the products of these trees on farms. This will lead to In the next issue... the actual tree improvement work in the area, and go a long way to point researchers in the right direction when _ Results of the Mid-Term Meeting they are working on agroforestry tech- nologies suitable, and adoptable, in the . Tef:.An Underutlized Crop Sahel. (ICRAF) 14 lfi CGIAR NEWS Safety for the Seeds of the Future By John Peacock and Mike Robbins There are wildlife resenres where endangered animal species can live in the wild. So why not plant reservations? Now, through a wide partner- ship of countries and institutions in the Eastern Mediterranean, they are becoming a reality in four countries in West Asia. But with an important difference: these reservations will be workingfarms. This biodiversity can be preserved in tries for projects and activities to protect office on the ICARDA campus. It already genebanks. ICARDA does this, as do a the world's environment. By the end of holds some data for the area. But there will number of national programs and institu- 1991, the framework for action for the be a need to train national scientists in the tions within the region. In fact, ICARDA's GEF gained the support of a sufficient use of GIS, so that training will be part of genebank is one of the world's biggest, number of countries to become a reality. the project. with 110,000 accessions so far, and dis- At the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, it was If the project is to gather information on tributes about 26,000 a year to scientists decided that GEF would operate the fi- the way the genetic material is affected by all over the world to use in crop breed- nancial mechanisms for implementation changing social and landuse practices, it will ing. of the Conventions on Climate Change need to be monitored. This will be done But this alone is not enough. We don't and Biological Diversity. Today, responsi- through a network of extension officers. know how long we can store the material bility for implementing the GEF is shared Farmers can also help-they know what to without it degenerating: moreover, while it by UNDP, UNEP and the World Bank. look for. Other assistance will also be needed is in a coldstore, it is not adapting to the Projects thus funded fall under four basic from farmers. One of the key parts of the changing world outside, which limits its areas; climate change, biological diversity, project is to persuade them to (say) keep usefulness in breeding. Just as important, international waters and ozone depletion. sheep away from wild relatives of forage genebanks cannot preserve more than a frac- GEF's contribution is the key to making legumes at the flowering stage, let a wild tion of what we need to keep. Ex-situ con- the Conservation and Sustainable Use variety of crop wild relatives grow at the servation, as it is known, is important and project fly; other generous contributions in margins of their fields, and grow a good mix has helped enormously, but we need in-situ cash and kind have been pledged on this of landraces (farmerbred crop varieties) in conservation as well. basis. the fields themselves. In the main, farmers Conservation and Sustainable Use aims Besides in-situ conservation to do that, right in the environment to at the eight sites, the project's ;_'_____r,_____ - which we will need it to be adapted. That objectives are to: & " 'F '1 is part of the reason why scientists do not G information o t _ 7 * Gather information on te " n^l < Jllt T 1"IZ 1 want to just create reservations for te o biodiversity; we need to use working genetic base of 10 target s 9Iyi ; crops and the social and4 1 farms, where the genetic material is tested f p w a _l by changes in farming practices and can fectices wl af- be watched over by farmers who know fec thml: what to look for. Anyway, simple reserva- * Produce a working model ' tions would dig too deep into scarce land for in-situ, on-farm conser- _ M resources. People must eat today, as well vation that can be repeated f ' ¶ as tomorrow. elsewhere in the world; * Conservation and Sustainable Use has * Devise a broad range of - _ . . been put together with Jordan, Syria, policy measures that can .CARDA genebank. Lebanon and Palestine, and a number of sf n m easurCARDA genebhnk. important institutions. ICARDA will ord administer and coordinate the project, but world; do not need to be persuaded of the impor- will not spend the money; as the * Strengthen national capacities for the tance of biodiversity. But-again-people implementing bodies, the national pro- sustainable conservation of must eat today, as well as tomorrow. So there grams will do that. agrobiodiversity. will have to be compensation in cash and Total cost over five years will be roughly None of this will be simple. For example, kind for farmers who are asked to change US$18.5 million, of which the crucial producing the database means using Geo- their farming pattems. US$8 million core is expected to come graphic Information Systems (GIS). The Meanwhile, on the ground, landuse sur- from GEF, subject to remaining adminis- scientists will have some help: one of the vey will be done of the target sites and trative and policy decisions. GEF is the participating institutions is the Intemational Global Environment Facility, a financial Plant Genetic Resources Institute (IPGRI), Continued otn page 19 mechanism providing grant and which is based in Rome but has its regional concessional funds to developing coun- CGIARl 15 Groundwater productivity than purchasing water, should be permitted to run water Continuedfrom page 3 largely because purchased water is not through canal courses as long as they reliable: farmers cannot count on be- do not interfere with canal operations. than small farmers. Policies to assist ing able to purchase adequate supplies Although private tubewells increase poor farmers with credit to purchase of water at just the time they need it. farmers' control over water and hence tubewells would be beneficial, espe- Farmers who owned their own increase productivity, they are a viable cially policies that encourage farmers tubewells had gross margins of Rs. option only in areas where good qual- to join together to purchase, install, and 5,000, more than twice as high as farm- ity water is abundant. In Punjab as a operate tubewells as shared enterprises. ers who only purchased water; farmers whole, 25 percent more groundwater Farmers, whether they are building a who had access to both canal water and is already being pumped out of the private well or sharing in a jointly their own tubewells had gross margins ground than is being recharged. Where owned one, would benefit from tech- of Rs. 18,000. good groundwater is limited, efforts to nical assistance in locating pockets of At present, farmers must sell ground- share water supplies equitably through fresh water, the report concludes. water to those who live nearby because development of water markets and The report indicates that owning a the cost of pumping it long distances is joint ownership of wells must take high tubewell contributes more to increased prohibitive. Where possible, farmers priority. (IFPRI) I14V NEWS 14W1 Cassava Boom in Southeast Asia Improved high-starch varieties are boosting Southeast Asia's holds with traditional methods and by large, modern factories. cassava output while diversification of marketing helps stabilize Most of the starch goes to domestic food processing, mainly into prices. In Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam, the improved cas- the production of monosodium glutamate, an important flavor- sava varieties developed by CIAT in collaboration with national ing agent, while some is used in the production of textiles, pa- researchers have already spread to more than 500,000 hectares. per, and other products. According to CIAT's preliminary but conservative estimates, the Until recently, the Vietnamese considered cassava a crop of new varieties have created benefits of nearly a half billion dol- last resort. "It has helped Vietnam through at least two major lars over the last seven years, mostly for small farmers. At the famines since World War II and was a staple of the Vietnamese same time, employment in cassava processing has risen rapidly. army during the wars with France and the USA," says Thai Phien The humble root crop covers 3.9 million hectares in Asia, more of Vietnam's National Institute for Soils and Fertilizers. But now than in Latin America, where cassava originated. Because the the crop is acquiring a new image as a raw material for industry. crop is highly tolerant of drought and infertile soils, it is planted Thailand was the first country to exploit the industrial pros- mostly by Southeast Asia's poorest farmers living in marginal pects of cassava on a large scale. Since the 1970s it has ex- uplands, above the more productive lowlands occupied by wet ported enormous quantities of dried cassava chips and pellets rice. to the countries of the European Union, which use them in "We've found that improved varieties of cassava, developed animal feed. More recently, the private sector in Thailand has from crosses between local and Latin American germplasm, in- created new cassava markets by exploiting the crop's poten- crease farmers' crop yields by 20 to 40 percent, says Kazuo tial as a source of cheap starch. According to reports from Kawano, a CIAT cassava breeder. "The roots of the new varieties Kasetsart University in Bangkok, about 50 percent of the also have much higher starch contents. Greater starch yields from country's cassava now goes to starch production. About a third the same amount of land translate into higher income for farm- of this is further processed into various modified starches, and ers who sell cassava to starch processors." half of the total starch production is exported to Taiwan and The new varieties resulted from Kawano's longstanding col- Japan. laboration with national research institutes in a half dozen Asian With the benefits of the new varieties have come risks. "In countries. The Japanese government supported CIAT's cassava 1995, cassava prices were quite high in Thailand and Viet- research in Asia for more than a decade. nam, prompting farmers to expand the area planted," says "In just two years, improved varieties developed in Thailand CIAT agronomist Reinhardt Howeler. "Then, in 1996, prices have spread to nearly ten percent of Vietnam's total cassava area dropped considerably because of overproduction and declin- of 283,000 hectares, according to Hoang Kim," director of the ing starch prices in the world market. In Thailand, some grow- Hung Loc Agricultural Research Center in Dong Nai province. ers lobbied successfully for cassava price subsidies." "Farmers are especially enthusiastic about the varieties in south- However, the private sector's continuing efforts to further diver- ern Vietnam, where most of our starch processing takes place." sify cassava products and markets are likely to lessen the risks for Starch processing in Vietnam is performed both in rural house- small scale producers throughout Southeast Asia: "Competing de- 16 i CGIAR Continued on page 17 Cassava Boom Bangladesh: Rice Cassava Boom Bangladesh: Rice ~ ~~~~~important for rice production, Ways of Continued from page 16 Continued from page 4 impror antsfor rice p i yseo improving and stabilizing rice yields through varietal development and re- mands for cassava roots should enable grow- rate decreased to 2 percent in recent de- source management will be needed for ers to obtain better prices," said Howeler. cades, it is not expected to stabilize within the rainfed lowlands. "Continued adoption of improved varieties the next 25-30 years. This problem is not The one-million hectares of coastal will further increase their returns from the confined to Bangladesh. In Asia, total ricelands, with varying degrees of salin- same amount of land." annual rice production must increase by ity, offer an opportunity for future ex- To balance its cassava production with 60 percent over the same period, just to ploitation. Use of new biotechnology industrial demand, Thailand embarked in maintain adequate levels of supply - and tools and products, and adoption of hy- 1993 on a program to reduce the cassava area this has to be achieved on less land, with brid rice technology, will be needed in by 20 percent and intensify production on less water, fewer rural workers, and with the future to raise and maintain yields in the remaining area through massive dissemi- fewer environment-harming chemicals. the irrigated ecosystem. An overall eco- nation of improved varieties. "By 1996, the Meeting the challenge of increasing nomic environment that provides eco- new varieties had spread to about 384,000 rice production will become increasingly nomic incentives to farmers for higher hectares or nearly a third of the country's difficult in Bangladesh as rice areas will rice production should be maintained. At total cassava area," explains Wilawan continuously shrink to meet the grow- the same time, production costs will have Vongkasem of Thailand's Department of Ag- ing demand for high-value crops and for to be reduced to make rice cultivation in ricultural Extension. urban and industrial development. In- Bangladesh internationally competitive. A potential downside of the cassava creasing irrigation coverage to the fullest In February, IRRI - in collaboration boom is the fragility of upland soils on ecologically sustainable level would form with BRRI -held a symposium on "Part- which the crop is grown. To meet rising a major cornerstone of a strategy for nership in rice research for sustainable demand, farmers will inevitably intensify higher rice production. Also needed are agricultural development in Bangladesh." production, raising the specter of seri- higher yielding varieties with different The symposium discussed major issues ous soil erosion, warned Howeler. With maturity periods and plant height com- and challenges that Bangladesh will face a grant from Japan's Nippon Foundation, binations that are suitable not only for in the early 21st century for achieving and he is working closely with national in- flood-free areas but also for shallow- sustaining food security, and the role that stitutes and farmers to find ways of mak- flooded ricelands. rice research could play in meeting those ing the cassava boom environmentally Because of the limited availability of challenges. sustainable, irrigation, rainfed lowlands will remain (IRRI) (CIAT) Making Muri... Joygun Nessa's life in Tangail, Bangladesh, revolves around rice: rice into the big pot with the sand and swirls it for 30 seconds. she eats it; her family produces it on their farm; and it supplies her Suddenly, the rice becomes alive in a burst of steam and fills the with a livelihood: making muri, puffed rice. pot. Rice and salt and sand-as a medium for puffing the rice-is all Ms. Nessa knows exactly when the rice is done puffing. If she she needs. Ms. Nessa, however, does not use just any rice. She rec- hesitates a moment too long, the rice will burn. With the precision ommends IR8 developed by IRRI, or BRI I for the best results. of a master chef, she dumps the contents into a clay strainer and To prepare her specialty, she uses a clay stove in which the fire is shakes out the sand. underground. It uses one-third less fuel than other stoves, which is The muri is warm and mildly salty, with a nutty taste. She makes important in a country suffering from fuel shortage. She has been it every day so that it's fresh for her customers and family. using the stove for about 7 years. She markets the muri in bulk and in small plastic bags at the Squatting by the stove, she stokes the fire by throwing fistfuls of family's grocery store. From 40 kilograms of rough rice, she gets wheat straw down the stove's holes. Sometimes she uses balls of about 26 kilograms of muri. For every kilogram of muri sold, she cow dung, rice hull, and sticks for fuel. The heat produced is in- earns 20 taka. Ms Nessa usually sells 52 kilograms of the snack food tense. each week, earning about 1,400 taka. Her yearly income from this Over one of the holes, she heats up a large clay pot with sand in business is 72,800 taka. it. Rice in salted water is warmed in a small pot over a different If she would simply sell the rough rice in the market, she would hole. She stirs the rice with a naruni, a utensil made of palm-mid- get 12 taka per kilogram. Selling the 80 kilograms of rough rice ribs bunched together. used to make muri, she would only earn 960 taka-440 taka less. When the right temperature is reached, she skillfully pours the "Muri is profitable!' she says with a smile. (IRRI) CGIAR %& 17 | ffi PERSPECTIVES 1fi I CGIAR Financial Concepts and Terminology The Research Agenda. The research agenda comprises the bulk must meet four criteria. They must: of CGIAR center projects and activities. Components may be ex- . be aimed at producing research or research-related (including ecuted by one or more centers and/or jointly with national agricul- training) international public goods;d tural research systems, advanced research institutions, and non-gov- ernmental organizations. Centers develop the agenda and work * be of high priority in terms of accomplishing the CGIAR's goals programs in collaboration with partners. The CGIAR's Technical and objectives; Advisory Committee reviews the agenda and, if appropriate, rec- * have acceptable probabilities of success; and ommends it for CGIAR financing. Projects included in the agenda * not have alternative producers or sources The CGIAR's Annual Financial Decisionmaking of supply with suitable costs or reliability. Process and Schedule (effective 1997) Non-agenda comprises activities which a center is qualified to undertake because of Setting the Agenda (MTM - May). At the Mid-Term Meeting, the CGIAR Technical experience, location, size, or other factors, Advisory Committee proposes the research agenda for the following year based on inter- but which do not meet all of the criteria for actions with the centers. Center proposals are based on the research directions agreed inclusion in the research agenda. upon during a triennial consideration of center medium-term plans (effective 1998). The Financing the Agenda. The agenda, as Group debates TAC's recommendations, taking into consideration advice from the Fi- endorsed by the Group, is eligible for financ- nance Committee on funding prospects, and endorses the proposed research agenda and ing by members, including the World Bank. financial allocations, with or without modification. Following the Mid-Term Meeting, the The financial requirements approved are the centers and the CGIAR Secretariat solicit overall financing indications from members. minimum needed to implement the agenda. All centers and partners are encouraged to Preparation of Financing Plans (June - September). Centers prepare their individual maximize financing, and there is no disin- financing plans for the following year based on specific financing information solicited centive to do so. Mechanisms to ensure that through bilateral contacts with members and past trends. World Bank funding is included the agenda is fully funded have evolved from on a percentage basis of funding secured by centers from other members-9 percent in earlier unsuccessful attempts to "guarantee" 1997 and 12 percent in 1998. full financing solely using World Bank funds. Confirmation of Program Content (mid-September). Centers indicate to TAC and the Recently, changes have been made in the CGIAR Secretariat any changes in expected funding for the research agenda, as deter- financing arrangements whereby members, mined through center interactions with individual members, and the implications of these instead of the World Bank alone, act to col- changes on program content. TAC reviews the program content of the research agenda lectively fill any financial gaps that might and highlights any significant changes for action by the Group at International Centers arise in the course of the year. Most mem- Week. bers now channel all of their support to the Review of Financing Plans (end-September - October). Following the confirmation of agenda. . . . r. . . . . . ~~~~~~Financing Modalities. Centers are prima- program content by TAC, the Finance Committee reviews center financing plans, includ- Financedannual s rt from ing the contribution of the World Bank, for consistency and feasibility, based on funding rily fmnanced by annual support from information solicited by the CGIAR Secretariat. ailb erom A misclanous income available from annual miscellaneous income Approval of the Research Agenda and Financing Plan (ICW - October). At Interna- of the centers. This includes contributions tional Centers Week, the Group considers the finalized research agenda and financing from ad hoc sources who are not CGIAR plan for the following year, leading to approval of financing and implementation of the members. The nature of financing does not research agenda. influence or determine whether a project is Disbursement and Implementation (January - December). Following approval by the part of the agenda. Member financing may Group at international Centers Week (in the previous year) of the research agenda and be directed to the CGIAR, centers, pro- financing plan, centers commence implementation of the agenda on January I of the grams, and projects with different degrees current year, and members disburse funds to the centers. Of the World Bank funds, half of specificity: are distributed in January; the remaining half are disbursed in June, following a review of * to the CGIAR with flexibility regarding updated center financing plans by the Finance Committee at the Mid-Term Meeting. allocation based on CGIAR priorities; Accountability (Year End). At the end of the current year, centers prepare financial * to centers or programs without any re- statements showing the use of the funds received in support of the research agenda. As strictions (with or without attribution re- well, centers confirm the use of the funds provided by the World Bank and refund any quirements); or overcommitted funds to the Bank. * targeted to a specific center project, or subproject, or activity as defined in a con- tractual agreement. 18 q pCGIAR Continued on page 19 C GIAR Financial Concepts senting the principal undertakings of the CGIAR. The matrix is con- Continued from page 18 structed by fully allocating costs of center projects to the CGIAR activities. [Projects are the basic center unit of activity with objec- tives, outcomes, and milestones. A CGIAR project portfolio of about All members are expected to contribute e o full cost of center 300 projects, with common definitions and concepts used by all cen- oprtions, including a proportionate share of administrative costs. ters, is in effect in 1997.] The CGIAR has identified several te The World Bank financing is always made available as general CGIAR aticsars as systeide1programs to respontific challen support.~~~~~~~~ Al mebr,r norgdt poieterspoti matic areas as systemwide programs to respond to specific challenges support. All members are encouraged to provide their support in a and to strengthen collaboration among centers and with partners. similar manner. Members usually disburse funds based on their fi- adt teghnclaoainaogcnesadwt ates simcialapromannedur.Memers usly disburse fhroundshbasd theiar. f- Center participation in these, included in the agenda matrix, is also nancial procedures, directly to centers througbout the year. The CGIAR Secretariat provides disbursement services, through the presented in a supplementary matrix. World Bank, to members who prefer to make a single disbursement Implementation. Centers often implement the agenda in partner- Wor Bank, t e r ship with advanced institutions, NGOs, and NARS. These joint ven- to the CGIAR. tures may involve shared tasks at different points on the research presentedastheCGIAR Aesearchagenda Matrix.,Thedi n fin l r rcen s i- continuum, from upstream laboratory-based research to applied field- presented as the CGIAR research agenda matrix, with centers com- level experimentation. Funding of such joint ventures is included in prising the rows and CGIAR activities the columns. Activities, pres- fnnigfrteCIRrsac gna ently nineteen in number, are aggregated into five groups, repre- 4 NEWS X4 Safety for Seeds Women Dairy Farmers in Africa Continued from page 15 "buffer strips" introduced. Stone-clearing Women provide 46 percent of Africa's 22 percent indicated it was children who for land itroducen stone-cle agricultural labor, produce about 70 percent provided most of the labor. Only 5% said that wil rlate habitat, ute iessry of its food, perform almost 60 percent of the husbands did most of the work in the dairy r b marketing and do at least half of the tasks unit. But on the farms where men received for income generation, so the project will involved in storing food and raising animals. the extension advice, over half of the hus- get these cleared stones used to make Alarmingly, however, only 20 percent of bands had exclusive control over the income new, similar habitats. Small simple dams these women are the direct recipients of ex- generated by the dairy enterprise and in an- and terraces will be built to provide tension advice. Studies by ILRI and the Kenya other 27 percent of the cases they shared niches for altemative income generation Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) have control, despite the fact that three-quarters and diversified plant production. Where investigated what effects a smallholder dairy- of the dairy operators were female. Exten- there is no alternative to discouraging ing package had on women's workloads and sion officers reported that some female dairy agricultural activity in a given area, the what implications this would have for dairy operators lacked enthusiasm and conscien- project will go for imaginative solutions development. tiousness in following extension advice be- such as apiculture. (This can work well, The study showed that, while 84 percent cause they derived little personal financial and ICARDA's Highland Regional of the farms included in the study were reward from their efforts in the dairy enter- Project has helped encourage beekeep- owned by men, 84 percent of the dairy op- prise. ing in the Taurus Mountains in Turkey erators were women. On the farms where However, almost all (97%) of the people with some success.) Field gene banks will extension messages were delivered to men, interviewed said that their total household be established for vulnerable species in three-quarters of the dairy operators were income had increased since they adopted the field margins. women. Kenya National Dairy Development Project There is much more to this project, Across all the farms, 48 percent of the package and nine out of ten said that they and the activities above are only a sam- people interviewed said that women did all had more milk for home consumption. The ple; it is impossible to describe them all. or most of the dairy work, 25 percent said women felt that the benefits to the house- Conservation and Sustainable Use of that hired laborers did most of the work and hold outweighed their lack of reward. The Dryland Biodiversity is one of the most most common use of the additional dairy exciting projects with which ICARDA income was food for the household (72%), has become involved, not least for the followed by school fees (34%), dairy inputs unanimity that has been achieved across (34%) hire labr (22), shool ooks nations, institutions and disciplines in Any6 stateg florhincresig aiy rouc y(16% and clothing (9%). putting it together. But perhaps its most tion i ny subhumid East Africrasmus take intod important feature is this: what we learn wff, 0 e .... _ ~~~~~tion in subhumid East Africa must take into inLbo,Jrd,SyaadPlete account that many, if not most, smallholder in Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Palestine units are managed by women and that these over the next five years could provide a 7r model for sustainable in-situ conser-va- women must be involved in defining the research agenda to make sure their needs tion of agrobiodiversity around the are taken into account. world. ILRI (ILRI) (ICARDA) 1 CGI AR Di 19 The CGIAR CGIAR Centers CGIAR Chairmian -- CIAT-Cenitro Interijacional de IFPRI-Interniationial Foodi Policy Ismail Serageldin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Agricotttura Tropical. Research Institute Apartado Acrco 6713' 1200 17tlh Street, NW f-Cali-Colornbia Waisliingtoni, D.C. 20036-3006 USA Cosponsors --, - Td5Z(k7)2 4450-000 Tel. (1)202-862-5600 Food and Agriculture Organizationvof th Uie .i iI q)Fa(i to 3Fax (1)202-467-4439 United Nations Developmient Programme f!UNDP) * IO etrfor lo izteonatoal IM-neraoalrrgto United Nations EnvironmentRP-ogramie.(U,NEP)-,- Forestry Resea~rch -..-.. .Waa,Ill, Ill Instituite The World Batik '~ '7 "P.O. Box 6596 p- --*I' M'i.,, 2ii-75 JKPWB JakarltalO1065, In1donesa I.I.il. III .ika 7' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Tel. (62)251-34-3652 .11 ~ h CGIAR MVenibers Fa 2 13-63/ I D.t.-Ivp-~~~~~l "Developing ' ' ~.CMMYT CetoInternacional de 11. ITA'-Interiiatio%nal linstitute of .~~~'-"W' / -~ .~ , 7/ -~ ,'Mejorainiento (le Maiz y Trigo Tropical,Agricutture Austratia. Atustria, Belgium Cn aKiBnldhBrz, Chin,ILioa7,POBo6-4 I? " Deninj.i k.. EI ljil.d 11 iiui. . ermany, C..i-.' IoreE t, India Inoei, 06600 Mexico. D. F. Mexico \ hdn iei 13 Irelaii.l hilk .IL. Lr: imiboutrg. Iran-,eya ora Mexico,Ngra Tel. 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