| Literature DB >> 30573920 |
Béla Teeken1, Olamide Olaosebikan1, Joyce Haleegoah2, Elizabeth Oladejo1, Tessy Madu3, Abolore Bello1, Elizabeth Parkes1, Chiedozie Egesi1,3,4, Peter Kulakow1, Holger Kirscht5, Hale Ann Tufan4.
Abstract
Nigeria is the world's largest cassava producer, hosting a diverse array of cassava farmers and processors. Cassava breeding programs prioritize "common denominator" traits in setting breeding agendas, to impact the largest possible number of people through improved varieties. This approach has been successful, but cassava adoption rates are less than expected, with room for improvement by integrating traits in demand by farmers and processors. This paper aims to inform breeding priority setting, by examining trait and varietal preferences of men and women cassava farmer/processors. Men and women in eight communities in Southwest and Southeast Nigeria were consulted using mixed methods. Women and men had significantly different patterns of cassava use in the Southwest. Fifty-five variety names were recorded from the communities demonstrating high genetic diversity maintained by growers, especially in the Southeast. High yield, early maturity, and root size were most important traits across both regions, while traits women and men preferred followed gender roles: women prioritized product quality/cooking traits, while men placed higher priority on agronomic traits. Trait preference patterns differed significantly between the Southeast and Southwest, and showed differentiation based on gender. Patterns of access to stem sources were determined more by region and religion than gender.Entities:
Keywords: Nigeria; cassava; gender; plant breeding; trait preferences
Year: 2018 PMID: 30573920 PMCID: PMC6267705 DOI: 10.1007/s12231-018-9421-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Econ Bot ISSN: 0013-0001 Impact factor: 1.731
Fig. 1Household use of cassava.
THE 55 VARIETY NAMES ENCOUNTERED IN THIS STUDY. Varieties names 1 through 34 were mentioned in the six study sites in the Southwest, while varieties 35-55 were mentioned in two study sites in the Southeast. The name 419 + and Vitamin A ++ were both mentioned in the Southwest and the Southeast.
| Southwest | Southeast | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 419 | 18 | Mokosokun | + | 419 | 51 | Nwaocha |
| 2 | Aboyade | 19 | Molekanga | 35 | Afdrimi | 52 | Nwaogomi |
| 3 | Adelowo | 20 | Odongbo | 36 | Afojiaku | 53 | Nwokoum |
| 4 | Agric | 21 | Ohori | 37 | Chigazu | 54 | Onye Ocha |
| 5 | Oko Iyawo | 22 | Okin | 38 | Dabiri | 55 | Umucass 38 |
| 6 | Arubielu | 23 | Olosumeje | 39 | Imi Anwuru | ++ | Vitamin A |
| 7 | Atu | 24 | Omolewe | 40 | Imo Best | ||
| 8 | Ayeke | 25 | Otegbeye | 41 | ISADAP | ||
| 9 | Dangaria | 26 | Oyarugba | 42 | Ishiaghiama Oke | ||
| 10 | Ege Dudu | 27 | Sajobo | 43 | Katikati | ||
| 11 | Ege Funfun | 28 | Sanni | 44 | Mgboto Umuahia | ||
| 12 | Greengate | 29 | Sunday | 45 | NR | ||
| 13 | Ibikunle | 30 | Texaco | 46 | Nwa Adacho | ||
| 14 | Idasa | 31 | Tokotaya | 47 | Nwageri | ||
| 15 | Idileruwa | 32 | Tokunbo | 48 | Nwankwo | ||
| 16 | IITA | 33 | Tomude | 49 | Nwanma | ||
| 17 | Koforogun | 34 | Vitamin A | 50 | Nwanuhie | ||
SEX-DISAGGREGATED RANKING OF THREE MOST PREFERRED CASSAVA VARIETIES ACROSS STUDY SITES.
| Ranking | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | ||||
| Southwest | ||||
| Pontela Akinola |
| Molekanga | Oko iyawo | Arubielu/Egedudu |
|
| Molekanga | Odongbo | Oko iyawo | |
| Elere Adeogun |
| Dangaria | IITA | 419 |
|
| Dangaria | IITA | Odongbo | |
| Agodo Owode |
| Oko iyawo | Ege dudu | Adelowo |
|
| Idileruwa | Adelowo | Ege dudu | |
| Agbetu |
| Texaco | Onigidudu | Olusumeje |
|
| Lufodo | Idileruwa | Texaco | |
| Oba Oke |
| Arubielu | Oko iyawo | Ege funfun |
|
| Oko iyawo | Arubielu | Tomunde | |
| Ibooro |
| Idileruwa | Odongbo funfun | Dajofolowo |
|
| Idileruwa | Oko iyawo | Aporo-ofo | |
| Southeast | ||||
| Umuoso |
| Nwaocha | NR | Katikati |
|
| Nwaocha | NR | Katikati | |
| Imerienwe |
| Nwankwo | Chigazu | Nwaonuhie |
|
| Nwageri | Chigazu | Nwankwo | |
SEX-DISAGGREGATED RATIONALE FOR CASSAVA VARIETY PREFERENCES. Listed reasons have been summarized from FGDs in all study sites.
| Name of variety (type) | Reasons for preference | Reasons for preference |
|---|---|---|
| Molekanga | high yielding, poundable, good for | poundable, root size, high yielding, weed suppression, low cost of production and early maturing. Also called food security friendly cassava variety |
| Oko Iyawo | poundable, mealy, high yielding, early maturing (7-12 months) and resistant to pest and diseases | mealy, short time to cook, good taste and product quality for |
| Dangaria | good taste, white color, very tall with multiple stems for planting materials. Good for feeding livestock | high market demand, poundable, good root and product color, weed suppression, tall stems, good product quality for |
| Idileruwa | resistant to pests and diseases, in-ground storability without rotting, weed suppression, low cost of production | can survive after pest attack, underground storability without rotting, can stay for 3-4 days after harvesting, good product quality |
| Nwaocha | de-waters faster, high dry matter, late maturing, allows for intercropping | beautiful to behold, good plant architecture, ferments quickly 2-3 days, odorless, good product quality for |
| Nwankwo | high yielding, marketable and early maturing | good product quality, high root number and early maturing |
| IITA | pest and disease resistance, root size and shape, branches well and smothers weeds, can survive harsh conditions | high yielding, post-harvest in-ground storability, high dry matter content makes |
OVERALL CASSAVA TRAIT FREQUENCIES. Frequencies with which cassava traits are mentioned by cassava farmers in the study sites in the Southwest and Southeast of Nigeria. Traits are listed according to the frequency (from high to low) with which they were mentioned across regions. Data are then dis-aggregated by sex. For the dissagregation into regions only the traits that show significant differences between men and women are shown. Differences in frequencies between the sexes are tested for using Chi-square test.
| Traits | Frequencies (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | All respondents | Women | Men | |
| high yield | 73.3 | 72.2 | 74.4 | ns |
| root size | 60.0 | 68.1 | 52.6 | 0.053 |
| early maturing | 55.3 | 54.2 | 56.4 | ns |
| dry matter content/swells | 42.7 | 43.1 | 42.3 | ns |
| cooking / processing quality | 40.0 | 48.6 | 32.1 | 0.039* |
| flesh color | 38.0 | 31.9 | 43.6 | ns |
| post harvest shelf life | 38.0 | 38.9 | 37.2 | ns |
| poundability | 37.3 | 34.7 | 39.7 | ns |
| fast cooking | 32.0 | 29.2 | 34.6 | ns |
| good price/marketability | 29.3 | 26.4 | 32.1 | ns |
| agronomic characteristics++ | 26.0 | 18.1 | 33.3 | 0.033* |
| taste | 24.7 | 30.6 | 19.2 | ns |
| resistance to pest and diseases | 20.7 | 18.1 | 23.1 | ns |
| adaptation to extreme weather condition | 10.0 | 9.7 | 10.3 | ns |
| labor requirement | 4.7 | 5.6 | 3.8 | ns |
|
| ||||
| flesh color | 30 | 19 | 39 | 0.023* |
| good price/marketability | 22 | 14 | 28 | 0.050 |
| agronomic characteristic++ | 20 | 8 | 30 | 0.003** |
|
| ||||
| Fast cooking | 13 | 25 | 0 | 0.047* |
**p value<0.01, *p-value<0.05, ns = not significant
+This group represents: “Easiness and suitability to make the food products gari, fufu and lafun” (64%) and “Products made from it swell and draw and mold fine” (18%). Others are “It ‘fills’ the stomach when eaten and fufu and gari made from it draws” (6%), “Gari made from it is appealing” (6%) “Roots after processing are not watery” (3%), “It is easy to process” (1%), “It is soft when boiled” (1%), “It does not have a smell when fermented (1%),
++This group represents “weed suppression and good canopy formation” (80%,) others are “beautiful, appealing in the field” (16%), “likes waterish areas” (2%), “stems can be stored for long” (2%)
REGION SPECIFIC CASSAVA TRAIT FREQUENCIES. Frequencies with which cassava traits are mentioned by cassava farmers in the study villages in the Southwest and Southeast of Nigeria. Traits are listed according to the frequency (from high to low) with which they were mentioned by each sex. Data are then dis-aggregated by region. Differences in frequencies between the regions are tested for using Chi-square test.
| Traits/gender | Frequencies % | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men and women | SouthWest | SouthEast | |
| high yield | 67.6 | 89.7 | 0.0071** |
| root size | 57.7 | 66.7 | ns |
| early maturing | 49.5 | 71.8 | 0.016* |
| post harvest shelf life | 41.4 | 28.2 | ns |
| cooking / processing quality | 39.6 | 41.0 | ns |
| fast cooking | 38.7 | 12.8 | 0.0028** |
| poundability | 35.1 | 43.6 | ns |
| dry matter content/swells | 33.3 | 69.2 | 0.000097*** |
| flesh color | 29.7 | 61.5 | 0.00043*** |
| good price/marketability | 21.6 | 51.3 | 0.00047*** |
| taste | 20.7 | 35.9 | 0.059 |
| agronomic characteristic | 19.8 | 43.6 | 0.0036** |
| resistance to pest and diseases | 18.0 | 28.2 | ns |
| adaptation to extreme weather condition | 8.1 | 15.4 | ns |
| labor requirement | 4.5 | 5.1 | ns |
|
|
|
| |
| root size | 67 | 70 | ns |
| high yield | 67 | 85 | ns |
| early maturing | 52 | 60 | ns |
| cooking / processing quality | 48 | 50 | ns |
| post harvest shelf life | 38 | 40 | ns |
| dry matter content/swells | 31 | 75 | 0.00069*** |
| fast cooking | 31 | 25 | ns |
| poundability | 27 | 55 | 0.025* |
| taste | 25 | 45 | ns |
| flesh color | 19 | 65 | 0.00019*** |
| resistance to pest and diseases | 13 | 30 | ns |
| good price/marketability | 13 | 60 | 0.000060*** |
| adaptation to extreme weather condition | 10 | 10 | ns |
| other agronomic characteristic | 8 | 45 | 0.00070*** |
| labor requirement | 4 | 10 | ns |
|
|
|
| |
| high yield | 68 | 95 | 0.019* |
| root size | 49 | 63 | ns |
| early maturing | 47 | 84 | 0.0050** |
| fast cooking | 46 | 0 | 0.00027*** |
| post harvest shelf life | 44 | 16 | 0.027* |
| poundability | 42 | 32 | ns |
| flesh color | 39 | 58 | ns |
| dry matter content/swells | 36 | 63 | 0.034* |
| other cooking / processing quality | 32 | 32 | ns |
| other agronomic characteristic | 31 | 42 | ns |
| good price/marketability | 29 | 42 | ns |
| resistance to pest and diseases | 22 | 26 | ns |
| taste | 17 | 26 | ns |
| adaptation to extreme weather condition | 7 | 21 | 0.075 |
| labor requirement | 5 | 0 | ns |
***p value<0.001, **p value<0.01, *p-value<0.05, ns = not significant
Fig. 2Frequencies of cassava stem sources.
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SEED SOURCE AND RELIGION. Frequencies (%) investigating the intersection between seed source, gender and religion in the Southwest. The southeast had only Christian respondents and was therefore not included in this Table. P-values relate to Chi square test.
| Gift from other farmers in the same village | Buy from others farmers in same village | Buy from other farmers in other village | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freq. | Freq. | P-value | Freq. | P-value | |||
|
|
| ||||||
| Women | Christian | 66 |
| 14 | ns | 4 | ns |
| Muslim | 36 | 18 | 9 | ||||
| Men | Christian | 57 |
| 16 |
| 23 |
|
| Muslim | 82 | 0 | 0 | ||||
|
|
| ||||||
| Muslim | Female | 36 |
| 18 |
| 9 | ns |
| Male | 82 | 0 | 0 | ||||
***p value<0.001, **p value<0.01, *p-value<0.05, ns = not significant