Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLester Reynolds Modified over 8 years ago
1
RESEARCH FOR DEVELOPMENT CSIR–CROPS RESEARCH INSTITUTE In-House Review, 2012 G.K. Acheampong
2
Rice Sector Support Project (RSSP)
3
Project Region/District RegionNumber of districtsRice area (ha) to be developed No. of Farmers No. of FBOs Northern112500 Upper East41300 Upper West41000 Volta31200150075 Total226000
4
Goal To contribute to reduce poverty in the project regions To contribute to national food security To strengthen the stakeholders of the rice sector
5
Specific objectives 1.Strengthening of the rice value chain in the project regions through; Land development – allowing the development of semi-intensive small scale rice production Capacity building of farmer-based organizations (FBOs) and processors organizations Extension support to producers Access to annual credit
6
Objectives cont’d 2.Strengthening of the rice sector at the national level through support to GRIB 3. Research of improved techniques of production, allowing to increase productivity and to reduce risks.
7
Research Team Scientists: G. K. Acheampong............ LEADER, Agronomy/PLAR-IRM/Soil and water management R. K. Bam.......................... Variety/Seed quality evaluation/Agronomy/Soil and water management P. K. A. Dartey................... Varietal evaluation E. Annan-Afful.................. Soil fertility studies/Agronomy/Soil and water management E. Moses............................ Base-line data on Diseases/yield loss estimate/dissemination of control strategies B. Mochia.......................... Base-line data on Insect Pests/yield loss estimate/dissemination of control strategies B. O. Asante/J. Osei-Adu.. Monitoring of outcomes/adoption and impact studies/socio- economic analysis Technicians: Rice/Protection/socio-economics
8
summary Total duration of the action 21 months, subject to revision Objectives of the actionOverall objective: Improved production techniques adaptable to the natural conditions to increase rice productivity Specific objective: Enhanced adaptive research responsive to productive and environmental needs Partner(s)CIRAD, MOFA, FRI, SARI, Target group(s)FBOs, MOFA Final beneficiariesMOFA, farm households Estimated resultsAppropriate rice varieties meeting both consumer and market needs Appropriate rice cropping systems adaptable to natural conditions Main activities Rice varietal selection Seed production Conduct on-farm adaptive trials on improved cropping systems Budget (€73,728) €44,728 (Project activities) €29,000 (Vehicle, computers/accessaries) “Target groups” are the groups/entities who will be directly/positively affected by the project at the Project Purpose level “Final beneficiaries” are those who will benefit from the project in the long term at the level of the society or sector at large
9
Activities Breeder seed production0.4 ha Foundation seed production2.0 ha Certified seed production-Train selected farmers in seed production (3 farmers per district/year for the 3 project districts) -Give technical backstopping to seed growers Rice varietal selection - using Mother and Baby trials: Sikamo, Gbewa rice (aromatic), Amankwatia (aromatic), Bodia, Sakai, Wakatsuki) -PVS nursery (30 var) Training on trial protocols and implementation-17 MoFA Field Staff (12 AEA's, 3 DAO.s and 2 RAO.s) -24 FBOs staff Training of trainers in PLAR-17 MoFA field staff - FBO representatives (75-150) Pest and disease monitoring- baseline surveys - yield loss determination Socio-economic-baseline survey on the outcomes -socio-economic analysis of intervention New cropping systems programme with CIRAD-baseline survey on rice-based cropping system -At least two cropping systems adaptable to agro-ecological region developed and introduced to farmers
10
Meetings with RADU/DADU to discuss planned activities
11
Seed Production BREEDER SEED 1 acre – Amankwatia (aromatic) ½ acre – Gbewa rice (aromatic) ¼ acre – sakai ¼ acre – Bodia ¼ acre Wakatsuki ¼ acre Sikamo Produce similar acreages as in 2012 A 2 ½ acres breeder seed plot established at Sokwai in Ashanti for the 6 varieties used in the PVS Mother and Baby trials
12
FOUNDATION SEED 3 ½ acre – Amankwatia (aromatic) ½ acre – Gbewa rice (aromatic) ¼ acre – sakai ¼ acre – Bodia ¼ acre Wakatsuki ¼ acre Sikamo Produce similar acreages as in 2012 Foundation seed established at Aframso near Ejura
13
Community Seed production TRAINING Train selected farmers in seed production (3 farmers per district/year for the 3 project districts) Each seed growers to cultivate a maximum of 0.8 ha. Train 6 farmers/district for the 3 project districts (including MoFA and NGO staffs) Technical backstopping for the production of certified Seed (4x/season)
14
On-farm evaluation of suitable lowland rice varieties Trial protocols developed Trained on trial protocols and trial implementation 18 MoFA Field Staff 24 FBOs 4 NGO staff Participants at the PVS training on trial protocols and implementation
15
SUMMARY OF TRIALS ESTABLISHMENT/DISTRICT Trial No.Baby Trial FREQUENCY TOTAL KadjebiJasikanHohoeRESERVE 1.Sakai/Amankwatia11114 2.Gbewa rice/Amankwatia11114 3.Bodia/Amankwatia11114 4.Wakatsuki/Amankwatia11215 5.Sikamo/Amankwatia11114 6.Sakai/Gbewa rice11114 7.Bodia/Gbewa rice10012 8.Wakatsuki/ Gbewa rice00011 9.Sikamo/Gbewa rice00011 Total767929 10.Mother Trial22116 11.PVS (30 var.)10102 GRAND TOTAL1089 37
16
Land preparation
17
Nursery establishment
18
Participatory Evaluation Farm walks Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) Household-level Questionnaires (HLQs) Yield
19
Field monitoring at tillering stage Wrap up meeting after a day’s field monitoring A well established mother trial
20
Field monitoring at seeding/maturity The evaluation team planning for the day’s activity before going to the field Evaluators admiring a good crop
21
Some fields were affected by terminal drought
22
Cattle grazed a Mother trial established by a lady farmerSome farmers harvested before Evaluators got to the field
23
WMCI members participated in the PVS nursery trial
24
Criteria for selection -Earliness -Plant height -Tillering ability -Heading -Panicle weight -Long grain -Aroma* Initial selection -PVS Nursery: 6 varieties -Mother/Baby Trials: Amankwatia* Seed Production MT/BT= Amankwatia + farmer’s choice Evaluation at end of monitoring
25
OTHER EVALUATION 1.Processing 2. Storage 3. Cooking 4. Palatability 5. Market acceptability
26
Adaptive research, Pest and diseases surveys and socioeconomic and impact studies Soil fertility studies - Site Specific Fertilizer Recommendation -Economic analysis of fertilizer recommendations Cropping Systems - Rice-okra; Rice-cowpea Pest and disease Monitoring - Base-line data on pests and diseases – (questionnaires, field visits and sensitization) - Yield loss estimate -Dissemination of control strategies - (Field days, training, backstopping, manuals, fact sheets) Socio economic analysis of intervention
27
PLAR-IRM training 2-3 weeks Training of trainers *2 trainers/FBO *17 AEAs + 4 NGO staff
28
ACTIVITY JFMAMJJASOND 1. Seed production Breeder seed xxxxxx Foundation seed production (FS) xxxxxxxxxxxx Training for community seed production xx Technical backstopping for the production of certified Seed (4x/season) xxxxxxxx 2. PLAR-IRM training xx Monitoring of PLAR-IRM activities (every 2 weeks) xxxxxxxxx 3. On-farm evaluation of suitable lowland rice varieties PVS Extension 6 varieties will be evaluated across the project districts using the Mother & baby evaluation approach xxxxxx MoFA & FBO staff trained on trial protocols and trial implementation xx 5.0 Cropping systems research program using rice-okra; rice- cowpea/SSNM xxxxxxxx 6.0 Monitoring of research activities /diseases and pests/socio- economics xxxxxxxxxxxx Work Plan 2012
29
Publications 1.Van Mele P., J.W. Bentley, R.M. Dacko, K. Yattara and G.K. Acheampong (2011). Attitude counts: engaging with rice farmers in West Africa. Development in Practice 21 (6): 806 – 821. 2.Acheampong, G.K., R.K. Bam, E. Annan-Afful, and T. Wakatsuki (2011). Weed Management and Rice Productivity in Traditional and ‘Sawah’ rice production systems in inland valleys in Ghana. Paper presented at the 1 st International Workshop on Sawah Eco- technology and Rice Farming in Sub-Saharan Africa; Kumasi, Ghana, 22 nd – 24 th November, 2011.
30
Thank You
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.