Participatory identification of farmer acceptable improved rice varieties for rain-fed 683 lowland ecologies in Uganda
Date
2013
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Crop Science Society
Abstract
Rain-fed lowland rice production in Uganda is associated with field expansion rather than intensification. Consequently, farmers are encroaching on vulnerable ecologies, especially the wetlands. The objective of this study is to identify farmer preferred and rain-fed lowland adapted improved rice varieties. Six varieties (IR 64, Basmat 370, Supa, Wita 9, K85, Buyu) were evaluated in four trials in the Kyoga plains agro-ecological zone in eastern Uganda. Variety K85 was preferred by 59% of the farmers, followed by Wita 9. Criteria for variety preference were grain yield, short maturity time, plant height and resistance to lodging.
Description
Includes abstract in French
item.page.type
Journal Article (peer-reviewed)
item.page.format
Text
Keywords
GENDER, KYOGA, ORYZA SATIVA, WETLANDS, EAST AFRICA, UGANDA, RICE, FOOD SECURITY, CULTIVATION SYSTEMS, PLANT VARIETIES, BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY, BIODIVERSITY, GENDER, PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH, CROP YIELD
Citation
Nanfumba, D., Turyahabwe, N., Ssebuliba, J., Kakuru, W., Kaugule, J., Omio, S., et al. (2013). Participatory identification of farmer acceptable improved rice varieties for rain-fed 683 lowland ecologies in Uganda. African Crop Science Journal, 21(S3), 683-691.