AMBIONET: A Model for Strengthening
National Agricultural Research Systems

A USAID-funded study by Rutgers economist Carl Pray concludes that
present and future impacts of the Asian Maize Biotechnology Network
(AMBIONET)—a forum that during 1998-2005 fostered the use
of biotechnology to boost maize yields in Asia's developing countries—should
produce benefits that far exceed its cost.
Organized by CIMMYT and funded chiefly by the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), AMBIONET included public maize research
institutions in China, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand,
and Vietnam. “Despite the small investment—about US$
2.4 million from ADB and US$ 1.3 million from CIMMYT—the network
was successful in increasing research capacity, increasing research
output, and initiating the development of technology that should
benefit small farmers and consumers,” Pray says.
Benefits already seen in the field, with more
to come
Pray estimates that farmers in Thailand and Southern China are already
gaining nearly US$ 200,000 a year by sowing downy-mildew-resistant
hybrids from the project. Pray’s future projections are much
more dramatic. An example is drought tolerant maize: if such varieties
are adopted on just a third of Asia’s maize area and reduce
crop losses by one-third, farmers stand to gain US$ 100 million
a year. Furthermore, in India AMBIONET has improved knowledge, capacity,
and partnerships with private companies; a 1% increase in yield
growth from this improvement would provide US$ 10 million per year,
according to Pray.
Emphasis on applied work pays off
AMBIONET’s applied approach stressed formal training and attracted
Asian researchers to work on maize germplasm enhancement and breeding.
This included graduate students, scientists who switched from an
academic to an applied-research focus, and advanced-degree scientists
with experience in DNA markers and mapping for maize. Many noted
that the partnering of molecular geneticists with breeders strengthened
their interactions and the exchange of expertise. The project also
boosted funding for maize breeding research. Several AMBIONET labs
used project money to leverage significant institutional and government
grants. Major research programs emerged from AMBIONET in India and
China.
In a 2003 interview, Shihuang Zhang, leader of a project
team at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences’ (CAAS)
Institute of Plant Breeding, said: “AMBIONET came along at
the ideal time for us. We were able have some of our young people
trained and start our lab. Then in 1998 and 1999, China changed
the way research was funded. We…were able to get big projects
for molecular breeding.” The CAAS group used the initial money,
equipment, training, and advice from AMBIONET to start the fingerprinting,
mapping, and a markers lab, as well as to hire leading national
maize breeding and molecular genetics experts. According to Pray,
this eventually converted the group into China’s major maize
molecular breeding and enhancement program.
Region-wide sharing
Benefits were not confined just to individual labs, as groups shared
knowledge and resources across borders. The Indonesian team, for
example, sent two young scientists for extended training in the
laboratory of B.M. Prasanna, at the Indian Agricultural Research
Institute in New Delhi. Veteran Indonesian maize breeder Firdaus
Kasim reported this to be extremely useful: “Prasanna showed
our scientists how to do downy mildew and genetic diversity research.
He was a very good teacher. After they came back they made a lot
of progress.” Prasanna also provided lines that the Indonesian
trainees fingerprinted in diversity studies and 400 primers (markers)
for downy mildew resistance.
Lines, data, and markers from AMBIONET are in use
region-wide. For example, sugarcane mosaic virus was identified
as a serious constraint in several countries, and partners are using
resistant lines developed under AMBIONET. Based on information from
diversity studies conducted under the project, Vietnamese researchers
are developing hybrids that resist lodging and are drought tolerant.
A regional program that worked
Research projects provided the focal point for AMBIONET, with training
activities, annually meetings, and the technical backstopping contributing
to the programs’ success. “The combination of collaboration,
cooperation, and competition…was impressive,” says Pray,
in the study’s closing statement. “This is the way good,
collaborative research is supposed to work.”
For more information contact
Jonathan Crouch (j.crouch@cgiar.org)
To view or download a copy of the publication:
The
Asian Maize Biotechnology Network (AMBIONET): A Model for Strengthening
National Agricultural Research Systems.
|
 |
|