In
preliminary trials, Dr Norbert Maroya, Project Manager for the Yam Improvement
for Incomes and Food Security in West Africa (YIIFSWA) project at IITA,
together with a team of scientists successfully propagated yam by directly
planting vine cuttings in Aeroponics System (AS) boxes to produce mini-tubers
in the air.
Aeroponics
System is the process of growing plants in an air or mist environment without
the use of soil or an aggregate medium. The technology is widely used by
commercial potato seed producers in eastern and southern Africa but
successfully growing yam on aeroponics is a novelty for rapidly multiplying the
much needed clean seed yam tubers in large quantities.
“With this approach we are optimistic that
farmers will begin to have clean seed yams for better harvest,” Dr Maroya said.
Preliminary
results showed that vine rooting in Aeroponics System had at least 95% success
rate compared to vine rooting in carbonized rice husk with a maximum rate of
70%. Rooting time was much shorter in aeroponics.
Aeroponics is coming at an opportune time
for African farmers. Traditionally, seed yam production is expensive and
inefficient. Farmers save about 25 to 30% of their harvest for planting the
same area in the following season, meaning less money in their pockets.
Moreover,
these saved seeds are often infested with pathogens that significantly reduce
farmers’ yield year after year.
However
with an established Aeroponics System for seed yam propagation at the premises
of an interested private investor, seed company or humanitarian nongovernmental
organization; yam producers can have access to clean seed yams.
The
soilless yam propagation system will increase the productivity of seed and ware
yam and effectively reduce diseases and pests incidence and severity (no
soilborne or vector-transmitted pests and diseases during the vegetative
phase).
Dr
Robert Asiedu, IITA Director for Western Africa described the results as
“impressive.”
“Yam
is an important crop in Africa and addressing the seeds’ constraint will go a
long way in improving the livelihoods of farmers who depend on the crop for
their livelihood,” he added.
In
conducting the aeroponics trial, a special structure was built in an existing
screen house with Dixon shelf frames using perforated styrofoam box, as support
for plant vines, while the developing roots of the plants in the air were
enclosed in conditions of total darkness to simulate the situation of soil to
the roots.
For
the plant and tuber to develop, an automated power house system was established
for atomizing periodically nutrient enriched water solution in the form of mist
to feed the plants.
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