Survey of farmers’ knowledge of cassava mosaic disease and their preferences for cassava cultivars in three agro-ecological zones in Benin. Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedecine
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background: Cassava is an important crop in Africa that is widely cultivated for its starchy tuberous root, which
constitutes a major source of dietary carbohydrates. Cassava mosaic disease (CMD) is the most devastating disease
affecting cassava in Africa and causes enormous losses in yield. In Benin, specifically, cultivars resistant to CMD are
not commonly planted, and even when CMD is observed in fields, farmers do not implement control measures,
presumably because they lack proper knowledge and training. Our study aimed to evaluate farmers’ knowledge of
CMD to determine whether there is consistency between farmers’ criteria for selecting cassava cultivars and the
currently CMD-recommended cassava varieties.
Methods: We conducted structured interviews with 369 farmers in 20% of townships in each of three agro-ecological
zones in Benin between November 2015 and February 2016. Farmers were selected randomly in each household, and
their fields were assessed for CMD incidence and severity.
Results: All farmers surveyed, representing a broad demographic pool with regard to education level, age group, and
years of experience in cassava production, successfully recognized CMD symptoms in photos, but most (98.60%) said
they did not know the causes and vectors of the disease. Most farmers (93.51%) reported that they obtain planting
material from neighboring fields or their own fields. In total, 52 unique cultivars were identified, of which 3 (5.76%)
were preferred based on their yield and precocity and 3 (5.76%) were preferred based on taste or ability for
transformation. The assessment of disease incidence and severity showed that the areas most affected by
CMD were Comè Township (37.77% of fields affected) and agro-ecological zone VIII (26.33%).
Conclusion: Farmers already know how to recognize the symptoms of CMD and could implement control
measures against it if they are trained by researchers. Across all surveyed areas, we identified six preferred
cultivars based on the four most commonly stated preference criteria (precocity, yield, gari, and taste. Our
results suggest that farmers will be more likely to use CMD-resistant cultivars and clean plant material if the
plants meet their existing preference criteria. We suggest that CMD-resistant cultivars will be embraced only if
the recommended cultivars are strategically aligned with the characteristics desirable to the cassava farmers in
each region.
