Local
farmers are denied the benefits of their harvests as, traditionally, they will
save about 25 percent of their yam harvest for the next planting season.
Access
to good quality planting materials is therefore a major limiting factor to the expansion
of yam cultivation in Ghana, says Dr. Emmanuel Otoo, a Yam Breeder.
“Once
you tackle and you are able to take away that limitation posed by the seed
system, the sky is the limit,” he noted.
Ghana is the world's second-largest yam producer after
Nigeria. However, yam production is declining in some traditional producing
areas due to declining soil fertility, increasing pest pressures and the high
cost of labor.
Researchers
at the Crops Research Institute (CRI) of the Council for Scientific and
Industrial Research (CSIR) want to shift from saved seed yams to growing seed
yams in the air, using aeroponics technology.
“Normally
people don’t plant yams with the vines, so we realized that we can do that and
actually increase the multiplication ratio from 1 to 240 and now what we are
doing is aeroponics, the first of its kind in the country; we’ve planted yam
vines not in the soil, [but] hanging in the air, gave them nutrients and
they’ve started bulking,” said Dr. Otoo, who heads of the Yam Programme at the
CRI-CSIR.
According
to him, one plant can yield about 1,000 seeds and “with this technology you can
plug the yam seed like you are picking pepper”.
The
Aeroponics System (AS) is the process of growing plants in an air or mist
environment without the use of soil – the novelty is for rapid multiplication
of clean seed yam tubers in large quantities by directly planting vine cuttings
in AS boxes to produce mini-tubers in the air.
Some
selected farmers have been engaged by the researchers to appreciate the system whilst
having hands-on-training on yam seed propagation techniques.
One
of such farmers is 56-year old Kwasi Benyado, from Atebubu, a predominantly yam
producing community.
“There
are times you run-out of yam seeds and you have to buy but with what we’ve
learnt here, we can nurse our own seeds to save money,” he said.
The
new system is being promoted to the farmers and commercial seed producers, who
would have the benefit of generating “true-to-type” planting materials.
Research
Scientist, Patricia Oteng Darko, is excited to be working on the project.
“Aeroponics
doesn’t demand so much space…with an enclosed system like this you’re sure to
eliminate the diseases and then you get a lot out of a small space,” she said.
The
yam producers have also identified access to water as another challenge in
production.
“Definitely
it’s a matter of climate change; we know that the rains are not coming in time
and they come in quantities that you don’t expect them to, so we are trying to
develop materials that can tolerate such conditions,” said Dr. Otoo.
The
yam seed developing systems is funded under the West African Agricultural
Productivity Programme (WAAPP) and also supported the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation.
Listen to audio report...
https://soundcloud.com/kofi-adu-domfeh-1/crop-researchers-grow-yam-seeds-in-the-air
Listen to audio report...
https://soundcloud.com/kofi-adu-domfeh-1/crop-researchers-grow-yam-seeds-in-the-air
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