| Improved maize varieties and partnerships
welcomed in Bhutan

Researchers in Bhutan and local
farmer, Sangay Tshewang evaluate maize from CIMMYT-Colombia
for its resistance to the crop disease, gray leaf spot.
|
Sandwiched between China and India, the Kingdom
of Bhutan is a small country that relies on maize in a big way.
But maize yields are typically low due to crop diseases, drought,
and poor access to seed of improved varieties, among other reasons.
CIMMYT is committed to improving Bhutan’s food security by
providing high-yielding, pest-resistant maize varieties to farmers
and capacity-building for local scientists.
“If there is no maize there is nothing to eat,”
says Mr. S. Naitein, who farms maize on half a hectare of land in
Bhutan. But it’s not easy to grow, he says, citing challenges
such as animals (monkeys and wild boars), insects, poor soil fertility,
drought, poor access to improved seed varieties, and crop diseases
like gray leaf spot (GLS) and turcicum leaf blight (TLB).
But since planting Yangtsipa—an improved maize
variety derived from Suwan-1, a variety introduced from CIMMYT’s
former regional maize program in Thailand—Naitein has seen
a real improvement in his maize yields. The local maize variety
yielded 1,700 kilograms per hectare, whereas Yangtsipa gave him
2,400 kilograms per hectare, a 40% yield increase.
“It’s no wonder that Yangtsipa is by far
the most popular improved variety among Bhutanese farmers,”
says Guillermo Ortiz-Ferrara, CIMMYT regional cereal breeder posted
in Nepal. “Nonetheless, many local varieties of maize still
occupy large areas of the country and don’t yield well.”
Maize is a staple food in Bhutan. Many people eat
Tengma (pounded maize) as a snack with a cup of tea and Kharang
(maize grits) are also popular. “Among the food crops, maize
plays a critical role in household food security, especially for
the poor,” says Ortiz-Ferrara. About 38% of the rural Bhutanese
population lives below the poverty line and some 37,000 households
cultivate maize. It’s estimated that 80% of this maize is
consumed at the household level, according to Bhutan’s Renewable
Natural Resources Research Center (RNRRC).
Leaf us alone: CIMMYT maize
varieties help combat foliar diseases
Many farmers in Bhutan have been struggling with crop diseases that
cut maize yields. “The recent outbreak of gray leaf spot and
turcicum leaf blight affected 4,193 households and destroyed over
1,940 hectares of maize crop,” says Thakur Prasad Tiwari,
agronomist with CIMMYT-Nepal. He estimates that maize is grown on
31,160 hectares in the country.
Gray leaf spot is a devastating leaf disease that
is spreading fast in the hills of Bhutan and Nepal. To deal with
this threat, CIMMYT sent more than 75 maize varieties with possible
resistance to GLS and TLB to Bhutan in 2007. Tapping into the resources
of its global network of research stations, CIMMYT sent seed from
Colombia, Zimbabwe, and Mexico that was planted in GLS and TLB ‘hot
spot’ locations in the country.
Ortiz-Ferrara and Tiwari then worked with Tirtha Katwal,
national maize coordinator-Bhutan, and his team to evaluate these
materials for their resistance.
“Together we identified the top performing lines
for gray leaf spot and turcicum leaf blight which will be excellent
candidates for Bhutan’s maize breeding program,” says
Ortiz-Ferrara. “We are now combining their disease resistance
with Yangtsipa, because we know it is high-yielding and well-adapted
to Bhutan.”
Kevin Pixley, associate director of CIMMYT’s
Global Maize Program, helped to develop a detailed breeding scheme
or work plan for Bhutan’s national GLS breeding program. “We
want to provide capacity-building for local maize scientists so
they themselves can identify and breed varieties that show resistance
to crop diseases,” he says.
“We feel more confident in moving forward with
the next steps in our breeding program,” said Katwal. He and
his team also attended a training course on seed production, de-tasselling,
and pollination given by Dr. K.K. Lal, former CIMMYT maize trainee
and former chief of the Seed Quality Control Center at the Ministry
of Agriculture and Cooperatives (MoAC) in Nepal.

Thakur Prasad Tiwari (right) agronomist
with CIMMYT-Nepal spoke with Mr. S. Naitein (left) about his
success using an improved CIMMYT maize variety. |
That’s what friends are
for: CIMMYT, Nepal, and Bhutan collaboration
In 2001, Bhutan began collaborating on maize research with CIMMYT-Nepal,
the National Maize Research Program (NMRP) of Nepal, and the Hill
Maize Research project (HMRP) funded by the Swiss
Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) in Nepal. The terrain
and agro-climatic conditions of Bhutan and the Nepalese highland
are similar, meaning that technologies adapted for Nepal will likely
work well in neighboring Bhutan.
CIMMYT aims to facilitate regional and national partnerships
that benefit farmers. For instance, during the past 7 years CIMMYT-Nepal
has worked with NMRP and RNRRP to introduce 12 open-pollinated varieties
(OPVs) to Bhutan. These modern varieties yield more than the local
varieties whose seed farmers save to sow from year to year. Included
in these 12 OPVs were several quality protein maize (QPM) varieties;
these have nearly twice as much usable protein as other traditional
varieties of maize.

From left to right: Sangay Duba, program
director, Bhutan's Renewable Natural Resources Research Center
(RNRRC); Thakur Prasad Tiwari, agronomist with CIMMYT-Nepal;
Ganesh B. Chettri, project director, agriculture support project,
Department of Agriculture, Bhutan; and Guillermo Ortiz-Ferrara,
CIMMYT regional
cereal breeder posted in Nepal. |
“Our CIMMYT office in Nepal has assisted Bhutan
with maize and wheat genetic material, technical backstopping, training,
visiting scientist exchange, and in identifying key consultants
on research topics such as grey leaf spot and seed production,”
says Tiwari.
Simply put, CIMMYT has useful contacts. For example,
at the request of Bhutan’s Renewable Natural Resources Research
Center (RNRRC), CIMMYT-Nepal put forward Dr. Carlos De Leon, former
CIMMYT regional maize pathologist, to conduct a course on identifying
and controlling maize diseases in February 2007. In September 2008,
CIMMYT and HMRP also recommended two researchers (Dr. K.B. Koirala
and Mr. Govinda K.C.) from Nepal’s NMRP to give a course on
farmer participatory research that has been successful in the dissemination
of new technologies.
“Ultimately, our goal is to improve the
food security and livelihood of rural households through increased
productivity and sustainability of the maize-based cropping system,”
says Thakur Prasad Tiwari.
For information: Guillermo Ortiz-Ferrara,
cereal breeder, CIMMYT-Nepal (g.ortiz-ferrara@cgiar.org)
or Thakur Prasad Tiwari, agronomist, CIMMYT-Nepal (tptiwari@mos.com.np)
|
 |
|