| Pernicious Weed Meets its Match
In a country where each person consumes at least 100
kilograms of maize a year, a new, easy-to-use, affordable practice
that could raise the crop’s production by 200,000 tons is,
naturally, greeted with much celebration in Kenya.
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The striking difference between purple and green: the maize
in the foreground is overrun with Striga, but the healthy
green maize has been protected. |
Such was the mood at Kisumu, Kenya, during the 5 July
launch of the Clearfield® technology for Striga weed
control. “This is good news for farmers, and good news for
the government,” stated the chief guest, Romano Kiome, director
of the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI). If widely adopted,
according to Kiome, the technology could “…lift poor
farmers from subsistence to income generation, poverty to wealth,
and food insecurity to security.”
A highly invasive parasite, Striga infests
400,000 hectares of Kenya’s farmland. Striga sprouts
fasten directly to roots of maize seedlings, sucking away nutrients
and 50 to 100% of yields by harvest time. The weed overruns 40%
of the arable land in Africa’s savannahs, threatening the
livelihoods of more than 100 million people who depend on cereal
crops for food and income. Kenyan maize farmers lose at least US$
50 million annually in grain to Striga.
Taking advantage of a natural variation in maize,
for nine years CIMMYT and partners have conventionally bred varieties
that yield well under tropical conditions and withstand imidazolinone,
an active ingredient in several herbicides and the BASF product,
Strigaway®. This imidazolinone-resistant (IR) maize is the starting
point for an elegant control method, as CIMMYT agronomist Fred Kanampiu
explains: “The IR maize seed is coated with a low dose of
the herbicide, which kills Striga as it germinates, allowing
the maize to grow clear of the weed.” Besides producing healthy
maize plants, over several years the practice helps clear fields
of residual Striga seed—a boon to farmers, given
that a single Striga plant produces up to 50,000 tiny seeds
that can remain viable for 20 years or more.

This farmer will lose a significant amount
of her maize yield because of Striga. |
Four new maize hybrids have been released for marketing
in Kenya under the common name Ua Kayongo (literally “kill
Striga”) H1–4, and farmers are enthusiastic,
as their statements in the Nairobi Daily Nation show: “I have
already seen major changes in my farm compared to my neighbors’,
whose parcels remain covered with the purple flowers of the parasitic
weed,” says Zedekiah Onyango of Baridi farm in Nyahera. “My
maize yield is many times higher since I started using IR maize,
and I look forward to even higher yields.” Farmers are also
urging the government to promote the technology to arrest the perennial
food shortages caused by Striga. “I believe it would
be much cheaper for the government to invest money in the technology,
so that this menace is cleared once and for all, and the production
of various cereals is restored,” says Beatrice Ayoo, another
small-scale farmer who is interested in the new Clearfield®
practice.
The technology was developed through global cooperation
involving CIMMYT; KARI; the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel;
BASF; private seed companies; and the Rockefeller Foundation; among
others. Peter Matlon, director for the Africa Regional Program,
the Rockefeller Foundation, was at the launch, and called the cross-sectoral
collaboration “a classic example of partnership.” The
Clearfield® control package will be released soon in Tanzania,
Uganda and, eventually, 16 other countries of sub-Saharan Africa,
in a process spearheaded by the African Agricultural Technology
Foundation (AATF) with DFID support.
For more information, contact Fred Kanampiu
(f.kanampiu@cgiar.org).
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