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Africa Rice Center


Please send your questions, comments or suggestions to:
Savitri Mohapatra, Editor
(s.mohapatra@cgiar.org)

September-December 2005

Number 10

 
Greening the Sahel: improved technologies
for irrigated rice farming

A package of high-yielding rice varieties, integrated crop management options and post-harvest equipment is bringing new hope to the irrigated rice farmers in the Sahel. The improved technologies, developed by the Africa Rice Center (WARDA) and its national partners, have doubled average rice yield in Mauritania and have contributed more than $30 million to Senegal between 1995/96 and 2000/01.

Improved rice varieties

Access to appropriate varieties was a major constraint to improving the production of irrigated rice in the Senegal River Valley. To address this problem, WARDA launched an initiative with national partners in Senegal to make available productive and adapted varieties.

Following extensive evaluation with farmers, three new varieties (Sahel 108, Sahel 201 and Sahel 202 with mean yields of 6 to 7 t per ha on farmers’ fields) were released in the mid-90s in the Senegal River Valley, where the total area under rice cultivation is between 30 000 to 35 000 ha.

These varieties have become so popular with farmers that the the proportion of the total area under the Sahel varieties increased from 3% in 1995/96 to more than 70% in 2000/2001. The total volume of paddy from the Sahel varieties increased from about 3000 t to more than 115,000 t during the same period and accumulated revenue gains from the Sahel varieties exceeded $30 million. Recently, five new Sahel varieties were released in the Senegal River Valley.

Postharvest technologies

In the irrigated rice systems of West Africa, threshing and cleaning are manually carried out mostly by women, who spend hours on these backbreaking operations. This not only affects their health, but also the grain quality and profitability of rice.

The Africa Rice Center in association with a wide range of partners developed the ASI thresher-cleaner to address these problems. Based on a prototype from the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), ASI has gone through several adaptations to match the Senegal River Valley conditions.

ASI has a threshing capacity of 6 tonnes of paddy rice per day (compared to 2 tonnes for Votex—the other widely used thresher) and grain-straw separation rate of 99%. It is not surprising, therefore, that over 250 ASIs have been constructed in Senegal since its official release and over 50% of the total paddy harvested in the Senegal River Valley is now threshed with ASI, making it the most widely used thresher in the area.

Its contribution was recognized in 2003 when the President of Senegal presented the ASI team with the ‘Grand Prix du Président de la République pour les Sciences’ — Senegal’s highest award for Science. The ASI team includes the Institut sénégalais de recherches agricoles (ISRA), the Société d’aménagement et d’exploitation des terres du delta du fleuve Sénégal (SAED), WARDA-Senegal, local manufacturers and farmers.

ASI’s popularity has grown so rapidly that it has now spread to other countries in the region, and WARDA has been collaborating with partners in Mali, Mauritania, Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire and Burkina Faso to develop appropriate prototypes. The Africa Rice Center, ISRA and SAED are now using this ASI partnership model in an alliance for a further development of rice harvesting technology.

Integrated Crop Management (ICM)

The Sahelian environment is very complex and the constraints and priorities within the same region vary considerably as do farmers’ perceptions and knowledge base. Realizing that irrigated-rice farmers need a wide range of improved technologies from which to choose, combine and adapt to suit their specific conditions, the Africa Rice Center and its partners have introduced the ICM approach that offers farmers ample flexibility and autonomy.

As part of this approach, a wide range of improved technologies that are still in the prototype phase are made available to farmers and are then adapted to the locally prevailing conditions through a progressive integration process.

The ICM basket includes options for improved fertilizer, weed, and water management, improved varieties and efficient post-harvest technologies as well as decision-making tools, such as optimum sowing date, seeding and fertilizer rates and timing of fertilizer application, based on crop modeling research. The ICM technologies are fine-tuned in farmers’ fields, with a high degree of farmer involvement in the adaptation process.

To ensure the success of ICM in the long term, WARDA is placing greater emphasis on the sustainable management of the natural resource base, including maintenance of soil fertility, avoidance of salinity build-up, and biodiversity conservation.

WARDA scientists have found that farmers could significantly increase productivity and profitability by use of ICM. A major attraction is that the ICM components emphasize better management of available resources without significant increases in input levels. Farmers in two study sites realized 60% and 85% increases in yields and profits, respectively. On-going and future research will emphasize the adaptation of the technology options to the broad range of irrigated rice production environments in sub-Saharan Africa.

 

 


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