Food Crops Research
Agriculture remains the backbone
of Kenya's economy. Food crop research is a driving
force behind agriculture as it provides the requisite
technologies in the form of genetically improved
food crop varieties and associated agronomic practices
required to reap maximum genetic potential of those
varieties. Over the years, research has gone a long
way towards increasing crop yield vertically (increase
in crop productivity) and horizontally (increase
in land area by expanding production into semi-arid
lands). To better address the problem of food insecurity
effectively, KARI must tune its food crops research
programmes to increase on-farm productivity, total
crop production and profitability. Developing crop
varieties with high genetic potential, resistant
to the major diseases and pests, adapted and productive
in cold and dry highlands, tolerant to drought and
low soil fertility, and having added value is a
priority. It is reckoned that if these objectives
are met and the socio-economic and policy environments
are conducive to crop farming economic enterprises
that this will translate into higher adoption rates
of new crop varieties that Kenya's aspiration for
food security could be met. As it is, only some
20% of Kenya's land mass may be classified as arable
land due to aridity in the rest.
Current Focus and Achievements
Food crops research aims at developing, validating
and releasing technologies (improved crop varieties
management practices) to farmers. Adoption of these
technologies by at least 50% of the target farmers
will significantly increase food security and thereby
contribute to the national goal of improved livelihood
of Kenyans. The strategy to adopt in this regard
is to breed higher yielding and stable varieties
of crops with desirable agronomic traits, including
value adding at pre- and post-harvest and alternative
uses which integrate crop and livestock farming
thus reducing cost of production. The genetic potential
of the improved varieties can only be realised if
appropriate crop production and protection technologies
are applied simultaneously. For practically all
crops, appropriate post-harvest technologies (storage,
processing, and utilisation packages) are required
in order to increase the shelf life of products
and to add value. In order to scale up these technologies,
deliberate efforts are being made to link up with
other stakeholders, such as seed traders, extension
agents and farmers to disseminate the technologies
to the end-users (millers and consumers).
Recent achievements in KARI's
crop research programmes include the release of
a number of improved varieties as shown in Table
2. The varieties released in 2000 are already in
production. Crop management recommendation manuals
were also produced by KARI in 1999 for the extension
agents and farmers to use in unlocking the genetic
potential of improved crop varieties. The varieties
released in 2001 are under on-farm testing prior
to being availed to seed companies/CBOs and farmers
for commercialisation and production.
Research Priorities and Emerging
Concerns for MTP III
Priority enterprises in food crops are:
(i) maize;
(ii) sorghum and millets;
(iii) pulses;
(iv) potatoes;
(v), root-crops
(vi) wheat, barley, oats; and
(vii) rice.
The rapid decline of pulses production (since 1993)
and also of maize, sorghum and millets, more recently,
is of serious concern. Total annual on-farm production
of food crops has lagged behind consumption, resulting
in food deficits, and thereby preventing the achievement
of Kenya's aspiration of food security. This poor
performance is due to, not only biophysical constraints
(diseases, pests and drought), but also to socio-economic/policy
bottlenecks (input to output economic ratios, inadequate
infrastructure, marketing, price levels and stability).
Profitability, Competitiveness
and Sustainability Concerns
It is indeed crucially important to mobilise the
research programmes in making the PAEs competitive.
For example, although maize is the top PAE in Kenya's
59 out of 71 districts involving nearly 3 million
farm households, the country still imports maize
at a landed cost of KES 11.00/kg. This is due to
the fact that maize production in Kenya (with yields
ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 t/ha, and 26 out of the
59 districts having an annual maize yield of less
than 1.5 t/ha) has been decreasing at an alarming
rate over the past five years. In early 2002, maize
was being sold by farmers at KES 5.00/kg and it
took four bags of grain to pay for one bag of nitrogen
fertiliser. If Kenya's maize farmers are to make
a profit and effectively compete in their own domestic
market, KARI has to make the maize PAE more efficient
on a system basis (e.g. from pre-production all
the way to marketing concerns). It is therefore
important for the Kenyan maize PAE R&D network
to be mobilised to develop and synthesize technology
that "targets cost of production" at below
the landed cost of imported maize. This should probably
not be more than KES 8.0/kg in order to be competitive.
To do this, KARI will strive to replace the inefficient
components of the maize PAE with more cost effective
options such as much higher yielding varieties,
better crop husbandry practices, improved land productivity,
more efficient use of inputs, lower cost of transport/warehousing,
etc. This would also probably include a greater
KARI focus on sustainable soil fertility management
including the use of locally available materials
and of organic fertilisers. Similarly, each PAE
R&D network for food crops will respond to the
immediate challenge of making their respective PAE
more competitive, at least in the domestic market
and, over longer term, in export markets as well.
Future Strategies
A determined effort will be made to ensure that
the PAEs become more profitable and competitive
both in national and international markets. The
following priority thrusts are identified for food
crops research:
(i) strategic studies at national level and district
level;
(ii) varietal improvement with emphasis on resistance/tolerance
breeding;
(iii) technology synthesis of system based and PAE
specific recommendations on priority on-farm concerns
in pre-production, production proper, and harvesting,
as well as important offfarm concerns in processing/value-addition,
storage and utilisation, and marketing of products;
(iv) a functional national gene bank as a backup
gene pool to the breeding programmes; and,
(v) operationalisation of technology enterprise
development initiatives through linkages with development
partners (seed companies, NGOs, CBOs, private sector
entrepreneurs, universities, IARCs, etc. Given the
updated priority rankings, the importance of development
of economically viable crop production practices
during MTP III, and the expected outcomes of the
proposed strategic studies, there will be a likely
shift of research programme emphasis towards soil
and crop management practices to conserve the natural
resource base, to integrate crop production (for
animal feeds) with livestock industry, and to add
value.
This will have implications
with regard to the allocation and composition of
the available human resource capacity and also with
regard to further human resource development. Food
crop research programmes will have to collaborate
more closely with the private sector, both in research
and in the dissemination of new technologies including
improved seeds. Increasingly, the private sector
will be expected to bear part of the costs of research,
especially as it relates to the commercial sector
through contract research with, and payment of royalties
to KARI. National, regional and international networking
will continue to operate much in the same way as
before, but strengthened to better realise synergy
effects. n food crop production, there are different
categories of farmers requiring different kinds
of services from research. There are large numbers
of poor farmers who try to eke out a living from
a small area of land, sometimes in high risk ASAL
areas, many working part time for other farmers
or elsewhere. There are also farmers who have other
full time occupations and "farm" a small
area to grow food crops, mostly for their own families.
These two categories of farmers grow their food
crops largely for subsistence and they are not much
affected by market prices for inputs of which many
use little and for products because they only sell
at times of surplus. However, there are also many
farmers who grow food crops primarily for the market,
often on larger areas and use purchased inputs;
sustainability for them depends on making a profit.
Although the boundaries between these categories
of farmers are not always distinct, it is important
for KARI to design specific strategies to serve
the different groups more effectively. Within the
MTP time frame, KARI intends to adopt the following
broad strategy to serve the "subsistence"
food crops farmer:
· Perform on-farm testing
and release to farmers those crop varieties (open
pollinated and varietal cross hybrids), which are
"in the pipeline", while aggressively
disseminating (with KSU and the private sector),
a wide range of seeds and other available suitable
planting materials.
· Strengthen resistance/tolerance
to pests and diseases of currently available varieties
both through breeding and development of improved
crop management practices.
· Facilitate the development
of low-cost crop and soil and water management practices,
including reduction of post-harvest losses in collaboration
with other stakeholders.
· Through biotechnology,
introgress/insert genes for nutritional factors
and tolerance to drought and low soil fertility
into crop varieties including land races, which
have already been accepted by many farmers in the
ASALs. For the second category of farmers, especially
those in the high potential "bread basket"
of Kenya (Rift Valley and western Kenya), the strategy
will be:
· In consultation with
the KARI socio-economics research programme and
other stakeholders, develop a better understanding
of the essential components and characteristics
of economically viable and sustainable cropping
systems in the high potential areas.
· Conduct national performance
trials, on-farm testing and release of higher yielding
crop varieties, which are already in the pipeline
(e.g. for maize yielding 30 to 60% above current
commercial hybrids), in order to make better use
of purchased inputs and to significantly increase
productivity.
· Develop crosses between
adapted commercial inbred lines and specialty gene
pools with known resistance to major biotic stresses,
followed by on-centre and on-farm trials.
· Validate and disseminate
ITK and conventional crop protection technologies.
· Facilitate the development
and adoption by farmers of agronomic practices such
as conservation and reduced tillage farming that
can greatly increase mineral fertiliser use efficiency,
in collaboration with other KARI programmes.
Goal
KARI's main goal in food crops research is to contribute
to the achievement of food security, reduction of
poverty and increased incomes for rural people.
Purpose
The purpose of the food crop research comprises:
(i) development of improved varieties with resistance/tolerance
to pests, diseases, moisture and fertility stress;
(ii) development and dissemination of superior crop
management technical packages; and
(iii) rationalisation of processing and marketing
to increase economic returns.
Expected Outputs
· High yielding, environmentally stable varieties
of food crops, fortified with genes for nutritional
factors and resistance/tolerance to biotic and abiotic
stresses.
· Agricultural production
technologies for higher and more profitable on-farm
crop productivity.
· Appropriate technologies
for sustained production, processing and marketing
of produce and products of food crops research.
· Information on system
based and priority enterprise specific recommendation
s for all levels of production and post-harvest
(processing, value addition, storage and utilization)
as well as marketing of the priority products.
· Functional national
gene banks with viable germplasm collections also
at center level to sustain the development of improved
varieties in the future.
· Functional linkages
with development partners for technology enterprise
initiatives.