Achievements and impact of NERICA on sustainable rice production in sub - Saharan Africa.
Date
2006Author
Rodenburg, J
Diagne, A
Oikeh, S
Futakuchi, K
Kormawa, PM
Semon, M
Keya, SO
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In terms of production, rice is the fourth most important
cereal (after sorghum, maize and millet) in sub-Saharan
Africa (SSA). It occupies 10 percent of the total land
under cereal production and accounts for 15 percent of
total cereal production (FAOSTAT, 2006). Approximately
20 million farmers in SSA grow rice and about
100 million people depend on it for their livelihoods
(Nwanze et al., 2006). Rice is the staple food of a growing
number of people in SSA: from 1961 to 2003 consumption
increased at a rate of 4.4 percent per year (Kormawa,
Keya and Touré, 2004). Among the major cereals cultivated,
rice is the most rapidly growing food source in
Africa: between 1985 and 2003, the annual increase in
rice production was 4 percent, while production growth
for maize and sorghum was only about 2.4 and
2.5 percent, respectively (Kormawa, Keya and Touré,
2004).
The most widely grown rice species, Oryza sativa, is
originally from Asia and was introduced into Africa only
about 450 years ago. Another less well-known rice
species, O. glaberrima (Steud), is originally from Africa
and was domesticated in the Niger River Delta over
3 500 years ago (Viguier, 1939; Carpenter, 1978). As a
result of their evolution, domestication and breeding
history, both species have distinct and complementary
advantages and disadvantages for use in African farming
systems. The Asian rice (O. sativa) is characterized by
good yields, absence of lodging and grain shattering, and
high fertilizer returns – unlike its African counterpart
(O. glaberrima). However, in contrast to Asian rice types,
landraces of O. glaberrima often have good weed competitiveness
and resilience against major African biotic and
abiotic stresses (Koffi, 1980; Jones et al., 1997a).
Dalton and Guei (2003) concluded that research into
genetic enhancement of rice generated approximately
US$360 million in 1998, compared with a total investment
of just US$5.6 million. This is evidence that rice
variety improvement has a potentially enormous impact
on the economic development of SSA. Numerous
conventional breeding efforts have been made to improve
the performance of upland rice (O. sativa) for use in
African farming systems. These efforts have had only
limited success, partly because the Asian rice, O. sativa,
lacks resistance or tolerance to many of the typical African
stresses (Jones et al., 1997a).
Citation
Rodenburg, J., Diagne, A., Oikeh, S., Futakuchi, K., Kormawa, P. M., Semon, M., ... & Keya, S. O. (2006). Achievements and impact of NERICA on sustainable rice production in sub-Saharan Africa. International Rice Commission Newsletter, 55(1), 45-58.Publisher
University of Nairobi, Department of Land Resource Management & Agricultural Technology
Collections
- Faculty of Agriculture [225]