The
variety is changing the description of cassava – a root crop often referred to
as “Africa’s best kept secret.”
Consumed
by over 300 million people in Africa, cassava has been marginalized in several
debates because of myths and half-truths about its nutritional value and role
in farming systems.
The
greatest burden of the crop is the stigma of being considered an inferior,
low-protein food that is uncompetitive with the glamorous crops such as
imported rice and wheat.
“But
the perception about cassava is changing… with vitamin A cassava, we are not
talking just about a crop that is rich in starch but about a crop that has one
of the vitamins that are most important for human Development,” said Dr
Wolfgang Pfeiffer, Deputy Director (Operations), HarvestPlus at the recent Crop
Meeting in Abuja.
Popularly
called yellow cassava, vitamin A cassava was bred by a coalition of partners,
including International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), National Root
Crops Research Institute (NRCRI) Umudike, and International Center for Tropical
Agriculture (CIAT), and released in Nigeria in 2011.
The
first wave consisting of three varieties was disseminated to hundreds of
thousands of farmers across the country. Farmers’ adoption of the varieties
is on an impressive scale and the appeal for the varieties has fuelled their
spread for research trials to other African countries including Republic of
Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Cameroon, and Ghana.
“Demand
for the varieties is up and we have engaged farmers for multiplication,”
Pfeiffer explained. “Our strategy is to get planting materials available to
farmers so they can consume these nutritious varieties and improve their
health.”
Vitamin
A deficiency is a malady in Nigeria affecting about 20 percent of pregnant
women and 30 percent of children under 5 years, elsewhere in Africa the
statistics are no better. A lack of or a deficiency of vitamin A lowers
immunity and impairs vision. This can lead to blindness and even death.
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