A Socially Embedded Cereal for Food and Nutrition Security in Senegal

dc.contributor.authorDiop, Baye Magate
dc.contributor.authorCodou Gueye, Mame
dc.contributor.authorAGBANGBA, Codjo Emile
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-02T16:06:57Z
dc.date.available2026-06-02T16:06:57Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractAgricultural diversification with neglected and underutilized species is a viable way to sustainably increase the productivity of agrosystems. Understanding the social, cultural, and ecological roles of these species is crucial for their promoƟon. White fonio (Digitaria exilis), a neglected cereal endemic to West African Sahelian countries, is recognized as a crop for the future due to its cultural, nutritional, and economic values. In this study, we described fonio farming systems in Senegal through an ethnobotanical approach. As expected in family farming systems, farmers largely practiced diversified subsistence agriculture on small plots and relied on local seed exchange networks. The importance of fonio varied among agroecological zones, ethnic groups, and gender. In the Groundnut Basin, where agriculture is more mechanized, late‐maturing landraces of fonio are cultivated as a cash crop rather than a staple crop. However, in southern Senegal, where food shortages are recurrent, fonio is more widespread and the culƟvaƟon of both early‐ and late‐maturing landraces contributes to local food security. These differences also reflect the cultural status of fonio: different among ethnic groups and more important for women than for men. Finally, the regressive dynamics of fonio culƟvaƟon in most regions emphasizes the need to develop integrated conservation and promotion strategies that take into account the diversity of social and agronomical roles of the plant.
dc.identifier.doi10.14237/ebl.9.2.2018.1072
dc.identifier.otherBECDB-7504
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.uac.bj/handle/123456789/6758
dc.language.isofr
dc.relation.ispartofEthnobiology letters
dc.subjectFamily farming system
dc.subjectNeglected and underuƟlized species
dc.subjectCereals
dc.subjectAgricultural diversificaƟon
dc.subjectEthnobotany
dc.titleA Socially Embedded Cereal for Food and Nutrition Security in Senegal
dc.typeArticle

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