At the UNCCD COP10 ministerial high-level session
Independent science panel proposed
to deal with desertification
Director General William Dar participates in the
UNCCD-COP10 ministerial high-level session on science
and policy to address land degradation and drought.
Global partnership is vital in dealing with desertification that degrades more than 12 million
hectares of arable land every year affecting some of the poorest and most food-insecure people
worldwide. Along this line, the 193-nation party to the United Nations Convention to Combat
Desertification (UNCCD) gathered for its tenth Conference of the Parties (COP10) in Changwon,
Republic of Korea on 10-21 October to discuss what can be done to address challenges related
to land degradation and drought.
At the high-level segment of the tenth session of
the COP on 17-18 October, ministers and other
heads of delegation held three ministerial round
tables, where they discussed responses to emerging
challenges as they relate to desertification, land
degradation and drought.
Director General William Dar served as a panel
member at Round Table III on “Harnessing science
knowledge for combating desertification, land
degradation and drought: The path to improvement.”
During the session, participants discussed the
interface between science and policy to enhance the
level of scientific process within the UNCCD.
As a follow-up of the conclusions and
recommendations from the UNCCD 1st Scientific
Conference in 2009, the proposed establishment of a
scientific advisory panel on land and soil
degradation was raised during the dialogue. In his opening comments at the panel discussion, Dr Dar
reiterated his call for scientific independence from
the political mechanisms of UNCCD.
“We need clear independence and respect for both
the scientific and political sides of the UNCCD. Each
must have its own unfettered leadership and
processes. I believe, for example, that the UNCCD
2nd Scientific Conference ought to be conducted
apart from the UNCCD COP or CST and without any
political protocols. The scientists must be in charge
of science,” said
Dr Dar.
Science, he added, is essential in identifying the
drivers of desertification and in highlighting the most
appropriate actions to prevent it. Donors must have
a clear idea of how big the problem is and must feel
confident that progress in overcoming
desertification can be measured through science.
Global partnership between governments, experts,
civil society and local populations was emphasized
during the Conference to scale-up successful
projects of the UNCCD. The need for a transparent
and scientific debate about the roots of
desertification was also raised.
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Partners and farmers exchange visits in Mopti and Segou
Farmers and technicians assessing Striga plants harvested at the Striga
hand-pulling competition.
With crop maturity fast
approaching in Mopti and
Segou regions of Mali, ICRISAT, the
Aga Khan Foundation and the Union
des Agriculteurs de Cercle de
Tominian showcased some of their
research activities in pearl millet and
sorghum to farmers and partners on 9
October in Soufouroulaye and on 10
October in Tominian.
Partners and interested farmers from
Mopti were invited to a field and
exchange visit in the villages of
Soufouroulaye, Bounguel and
Madiama. Among the visitors were
representatives of the Regional
Directorate of Agriculture, the
Institute d’Economie Rurale (IER),
Office du Riz de Mopti, the seed certification
service, the West African Seed Alliance (WASA),
ICRISAT-Mali and ICRISAT-Niger, representatives of
farmer organizations Mooriben and FUMA-Gaskiya
in Niger and NGOs EUCORD, Caritas and Catholic
Relief Services.
The group visited farmer field school trials on
integrated Striga and soil fertility management,
sorghum and pearl millet varietal tests, and
demonstration plots showing Zai, microdosing and
pearl millet-cowpea intercropping. Despite the
unfavorable rainfall conditions in September, the
trials and demonstrations have shown acceptable
levels of yield, in most cases better than in the
surrounding farmers’ fields. The visiting farmers and partners showed great interest in the crop management practices and varieties shown.
Later, a group of 20 farmers, 5 field agents and the
Niger delegation visited Tominian, where they were
shown videos on composting and the use of
livestock and trees for better crop growth. They also
visited Dobwo village, where UACT had organized
their first “Striga information and hand-pulling day.”
Village communities were taught about Striga and its
control, which was followed by a Striga hand-pulling
competition. The first prize went to Fidel Diarra,
who with his family pulled out a whopping 81 kg of
Striga plants, mostly from his own field. In total, over
200 kg of Striga plants were pulled out by 11 groups
of people.
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World Food Day celebration in Kenya showcases
HOPE project
A woman farmer showing finger millet seed packs that she bought.
The achievements of the HOPE project
were showcased at the World Food Day
celebration held in Gertrude Omasaja’s farm
in Amaase village, South Teso District,
Kenya on 14 October. About 1000 people
(mostly farmers), school children, local
extension staff and government
administrators, seed companies, agrodealers,
local bank representatives, farmer
group officials and community-based NGOs
participated in the event. ICRISAT was
represented by Daniel Otwani of the Alupe
Research Centre, Busia.
Reading out the keynote message on behalf
of FAO Director General Jacques Diouf,
chief guest Canon Zacheus Masake, Director
of the NGO Western Region Christian
Community Services (WRCCS) emphasized
the role of rural households in producing food for consumption in rural and urban areas. He
urged for stronger and closer partnership between
farmers, industry and credit institutions on one hand,
and research, extension and NGOs on the other
hand in order to empower rural households to
produce surplus food and increase food security in
sub-Saharan Africa.
An agro-dealer showing seed packs and other inputs to participants.
On display at the celebration were demonstration
plots of improved finger millet varieties U-15, Okhale1 and P224 (planted in rows, as opposed to
the local traditional method of random planting) and
food preparations from finger millet. Exodus Farm
Inputs, an agro-dealership displayed small seed
packs of U-15 and Okhale1 and other agro-inputs for
viewing and promotion. The seed was produced by
select farmers working with the HOPE project under
the supervision of local extension, KARI and ICRISAT
staff to promote its demand and to initiate informal
seed supply of improved varieties.
Participants were also taught the need to use
improved finger millet varieties,
microdosing, Striga and blast disease control
methods and suitable post-harvest handling
techniques to boost productivity and grain
quality. Nearly 62% of the finger millet seed
packs displayed by the agro-dealer
comprised of variety U-15, followed by
Okhale 1 (10%) which were sold to farmers,
clearly indicating where the market
preference lies.
Pascilisia Wanyonyi, a finger millet farmer
in the HOPE project was presented with an
FAO-Government of Kenya certificate as the
best finger millet farmer for her efforts in
improving food security in the district.
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ICRISAT Niamey holds workshop on remote sensing
and GIS skills
Participants of the workshop at ICRISAT Niamey.
A three-day in-depth course on the use of fine
resolution remote sensing technologies for
agriculture and natural resources management for
agronomists, geneticists, economists, farm managers,
GIS specialists and graduate students based in
ICRISAT-Niamey was held on 11-13 October.
Rodolfo Martinez Morales, Crop Diversification
Scientist, ICRISAT-Niamey, gave the participants a
historical overview of technology development
beginning with the analysis of LANDSAT satellite
imagery to highest definition IKONOS, Quickbird
and GEOEYE1 satellites. Topics also included the
basics of image processing algorithms and how
advanced statistical and mathematical theory is
applied to the development of the latest remote
sensing software to produce more accurate
vegetation and land-use maps.
The workshop is the first in a series that will
continue on 8-10 November and 6-8 December to
further analyze these maps in relation with other environmental data such as climate, geology,
topography and soils using GIS software. Emphasis
will be placed on hydrological analysis to determine
important watersheds along the Niger river basin,
feasibility studies for land-use rezoning, and use of
spatial interpolation techniques to create digital maps
of climate and soil data using GPS technologies.
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Wheat biofortification planning meeting held
(L to R) Meike Andersson (HarvestPlus), KN Rai, Wolfgang
H Pfeiffer and AS Rao in the ICRISAT Patancheru pearl
millet field.
ICRISAT and HarvestPlus organized a one-day
meeting on 15 October to discuss wheat
biofortification research directions and plans for the
2011-12 crop season in India. The meeting was
attended by 15 participants from ICRISAT,
HarvestPlus, NARS and the private sector.
Wolfgang Pfeiffer, Deputy Director, HarvestPlus
Development and Delivery Program led the
discussion with an overview of the wheat biofortification research. This was followed by
individual center presentations.
Though results from 2009-2010 evaluations showed
that none of the wheat lines had high zinc (Zn) and
high yields across locations, a few of the new lines
from the 2010-2011 evaluations did show high yields
and high levels of Zn compared to the controls.
Work plans of the participating centers – the
Directorate of Wheat Research (DWR), Karnal;
Punjab Agricultural University (PAU), Ludhiana;
Banaras Hindu University (BHU), Varanasi; and
MAHYCO and Nuziveedu seed companies – were
approved. Also discussed was the planting plan for
BHU, which will host the Annual HarvestPlus Wheat
Group meeting in February 2012. HarvestPlus will
look favorably to setting up X-ray Fluorescence
Spectrometer (XRF) units at these three centers to
strengthen biofortification wheat breeding research.
The participating centers will contribute their highzinc
lines to DWR to constitute a joint multilocation
trial to validate earlier results. While at ICRISAT,
Wolfgang Pfeiffer took time to visit pearl millet
biofortification research, especially the hybrid trials
being conducted to identify high-yielding and
high-iron hybrids.
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10th African Crop Science Society Conference
ICRISAT-SLP partners bag award for second best paper
Cattle grazing crop residues after harvest in Nkayi
district, Zimbabwe.
The ICRISAT-Systemwide Livestock
Programme (SLP/CGIAR) team represented
by Sabine Homann-Kee Tui (ICRISATBulawayo)
and Elizabeth Bandason (Bunda
College, Malawi) bagged the second best paper
award at the 10th African Crop Science Society
Conference held on 10-13 October in Maputo.
The team presented the initial results of the
southern Africa regional case study on
optimizing the use of crop residue through a
comparative farming systems analysis to
illustrate the different stages of crop livestock intensification at the project sites in
Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe and to determine site-specific entry points for interventions.
They illustrated the special case of mixed croplivestock
systems and crop residue uses in Mzimba
district, Northern Malawi. Mixed crop-livestock
systems in semi-arid southern Africa are a function
of the interplay between agro-ecological conditions,
human population densities, and local and national
drivers. While the sites in Zimbabwe and
Mozambique show a strong growth potential in
livestock with scope for improving markets to
enhance impact, the Malawian case revealed that investment in agricultural inputs pays off and that
government support can kick-start this process.
Livestock production and market development can
lead to greater crop-livestock integration, crosssubsidization
and sustainable intensification.
Development programs should take cognizance of
mixed farming systems in the context of local and
national drivers, and align interventions with those
factors as well as with farmers’ aspirations and
resource endowments.
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Farmers’ training on pest and disease management
in pigeonpea
ICRISAT scientists with farmers and technicians monitoring the
IPPT field in Sinapali Nauparha.
A farmers’ training on integrated pest management
(IPM) and integrated disease management (IDM) was conducted for about 120 participants in
Kalahandi and Nauparha districts on 12 and 14
October, respectively under the project
“Introduction and expansion of improved
pigeonpea production technology in rainfed
upland ecosystem of Orissa.”
The training sought to educate farmers and
technicians of partner NGOs and the
Department of Agriculture on cultural
management against pests and diseases
affecting pigeonpea. V Rameshwar Rao (IPM)
and T Rameshwar (IDM) served as resource
persons during the training. Also present
were ICRISAT scientists Myer Mula and RV
Kumar who are monitoring the improved
pigeonpea production technology (IPPT) and
farmers’ participatory varietal trials (FPVT) in
the project sites.
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31st Session of The Academy of Environmental Biology
Hari Sharma and students garner awards
HC Sharma (right ) receiving the award from NS Gajbhiye,
Vice-Chancellor, Gaur Central University, Sagar, MP.
It was a day of accolades for ICRISAT at the 31st
session of the Academy of Environmental Biology
recently. Hari Sharma was conferred the “Gold
Medal for Meritorious Services to the Society.” He
has served the academy as
a counselor and Vice-
President of the society and is also Associate Editor
of the society’s journal “Eco-physiology and
Environmental Health.”
In the best research paper presentation competition
for young scientists, in which 15 papers competed
(three from ICRISAT), the research on “Induced
resistance to insects in groundnut” by Abdul Rashid
War, HC Sharma, SP Sharma, Gabriel Paulraj, and
Sj
Ignacimuthu was given the BRPM Gold Medal
Award. In the poster competition, the best medal
poster went to “Mechanism and diversity of
resistance to shoot fly, Atherigona soccata resistance
in sorghum, Sorghum bicolor” by MD Riyazaddin,
RS Munghate, BVS Reddy, A Ashok Kumar, PB
Kavikishor and HC Sharma. The second prize,
meanwhile, went to the poster on “Host-plant
resistance to beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua in
chickpea: A component of IPM to reduce pesticide
use and environmental pollution” by M Shankar, HC
Sharma, SP Sharma and T Ramesh Babu.
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USAID Feed the Future meetings in Addis Ababa
USAID conducted two further consultations on
14-15 October and 17-18 October with CG
Centers to implement their Feed the Future
research strategy in two target areas: the Ethiopian
highlands; and, maize-mixed systems in Eastern
and Southern Africa with an emphasis on
Tanzania. ICRISAT was represented at the
meetings by Peter Ninnes, Said Silim, Alastair Orr
and Andre van Rooyen.
Following the meetings, and the earlier one for
West and Central Africa held at ICRISAT in Mali,
concept notes will be developed with the aim to
present overall research plans in workshops to be
held in Tamale (northern Ghana), Addis Ababa,
and Dar es salaam, in January/February next year.
The research programs will be implemented soon
after these workshops. A total of $9M per year,
with an expected timeframe of 5 years, has been
set aside for the three focal regions/systems.
USAID has emphasized that the research strategy,
developed by its Office of Agricultural Research
and Policy, will be complementary to mission
efforts in target countries under the Feed the Future
initiative. Already, ICRISAT has participated in a
country-level program in Zambia, under the
leadership of Moses Siambi and it looks forward to
further efforts in the regions to work with USAID.
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Delegates of International Zinc Symposium visit Patancheru
International zinc symposium delegates interacting with ICRISAT scientists at
Patancheru.
Eighty delegates attending
the Third International Zinc
Symposium in Hyderabad
visited Patancheru on 14
October. CLL Gowda,
Program Director for Grain
Legumes, welcomed the
delegation on behalf of the
Director General and the
ICRISAT management. The
delegation was taken
through a video
presentation, field tour, and
poster presentation of
ICRISAT programs.
The visitors showed keen
interest in the
entrepreneurship and
business models of the
USAID Feed the Future meetings in Addis Ababa
USAID conducted two further consultations on
14-15 October and 17-18 October with CG
Centers to implement their Feed the Future
research strategy in two target areas: the Ethiopian
highlands; and, maize-mixed systems in Eastern
and Southern Africa with an emphasis on
Tanzania. ICRISAT was represented at the
meetings by Peter Ninnes, Said Silim, Alastair Orr
and Andre van Rooyen.
Following the meetings, and the earlier one for
West and Central Africa held at ICRISAT in Mali,
concept notes will be developed with the aim to
present overall research plans in workshops to be
held in Tamale (northern Ghana), Addis Ababa,
and Dar es salaam, in January/February next year.
The research programs will be implemented soon
after these workshops. A total of $9M per year,
with an expected timeframe of 5 years, has been
set aside for the three focal regions/systems.
USAID has emphasized that the research strategy,
developed by its Office of Agricultural Research
and Policy, will be complementary to mission
efforts in target countries under the Feed the Future
initiative. Already, ICRISAT has participated in a
country-level program in Zambia, under the
leadership of Moses Siambi and it looks forward to
further efforts in the regions to work with USAID. g
International zinc symposium delegates interacting with ICRISAT scientists at
Patancheru.
Agribusiness Innovation Platform (AIP) and the
Platform for Translational Research for Transgenic
Crops (PTTC), watershed and nutrient management
research, especially those pertaining to high Fe and
high Zn groundnut, pearl millet and sorghum;
pigeonpea hybrids; sweet sorghum; and earlymaturing
bold-seeded chickpea.
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