IAR 2017 Annual Research Review and REFILS Group Picture |
·
*Advocate
for mandate review of research institutes
·
*Says
2016 cropping season successful…
Meanwhile, the overview 2016 cropping scheme performance was described successful by scientists due to heavy rainfall compared to the previous years as questions on measurement for assessment description was asked.
Supporting this position, Hon. Danagundi said the movement of
IAR tomato research mandate to National Horticultural Research Institute,
Ibadan where many of the tomatoes lines cannot be found thereby called on ARCN
to utilize its mandate through National Assembly to carry review saying “many
of these tomato lines cannot be found in NIHORT anymore as farmers are losing a
lot”
However the speech read by the Executive Director, IAR Prof.
I.U Abubakar had attended to the questions raised by scientists who want to
know the yard stick measurement of the success achievement that 2016 cropping
program of the Institute has recorded.
In his speech, Prof. Abubakar has said that the institute in
the last cropping season had recorded success despite paucity of fund for
research programme saying “ in the 2016 cropping season, our scientist
conducted different researches in areas of genetic improvement of our mandate
crops, crop protection, irrigation, soil science, agricultural mechanization,
crop management practices, economics and extension”
Prof. Abubakar further stated that “three new high yielding
maize varieties SAMMAZ 49, SAMMAZ 50 and SAMMAZ 51 were released in 2016. The
two varieties SAMMAZ 49 and 50 are hybrid with orange and white grain colours
respectively. While SAMMAZ 49 is pro-vitamin “A” hybrid and yield up to 7.8
tonnes per hectare, SAMMAZ 50 is drought and striga tolerant with yields of 9.3
tons per hectare. The third variety SAMMAZ 51 is open pollinated, white grain
colour and yield .5 tonnes per hectare. This brings to a total of 51 maize
varieties released by IAR to date.
Already, efforts are being geared towards
releasing additional 10 maize varieties in the coming season. The has several
candidate varieties of sorghum, groundnut, cowpea, cotton and jatropha being
prepared for release soon. The candidate varieities are not only superior in
yield to existing varieties, but address most biotic and abiotic stresses. I am
glad to inform you that IAR through its collaborative research with ICRISAT
under the groundnut project “groundnut up scaling project for small holder
farmers in Ghana, Mali and Nigeria” demonstrated the performance of IAR
groundnut Sheller at several locations in five of her mandate states: Jigawa,
Kano, Katsina, Kebbi and Sokoto with outstanding results”
“ the cowpea out
scaling project which is funded by USAID and jointly implemented by IAR and
IITA has so far distributed 18.8 tons of five cowpea seed varieties ( SAMPEA
10, SAMPEA 13, SAMPEA14, UAM109 1046-6-1, UAM09 1051-1) to farmers which were
planted on 1,350 hectare for multiplication. About 8000 farmers, extension
agents and seed technicians have been trained and 780 households and 43
secondary schools were also trained and sensitized on cowpea nutrition. The
project has reached an estimate population of about 10,000.000 people via radio
and it has successful established functional innovation platform in Kano,
Katsina and Sokoto states” said IAR ED.
The need to take this technologies through extension services
channel was the opinion of Director, North West, FMARD , Mr. Remi Adeoye who
commended the field work of IAR, and suggested the need for strong linkage
between research work and extension clamoring for sufficient funding like the
system in Argentina just as former Director, IAR and Vice Chancellor at Alkami
University, Katsina Prof. Y. Ado has rightly pointed saying mechanization
Institutes have developed many simple tools without off takers thereby posited
the need to ban any importation of any machinery that have been developed in
Nigeria.
According to Prof Ado “ in the 80s as student, the
Mohammadu Buhari led government ban malt and barley, and this led to Prof.
Ogunlana to breed sorghum to replace malt and barley which was sponsor by
Nigeria Brewery. The Industry must challenge the research Institute to produce
for their specification while extension must transfer the new technologies to
the farmers”
However, the Acting Executive Director, Agricultural Research
Council Research (ARCN) Prof. A.A Voh reiterated the commitment of his council
to ensuring research institutes’ responsiveness to farmers’ need with the view
of up scaling production for both consumption and export, added that the FMARD
was willing to close the productivity and export challenges in the legume and
oil seed thereby demanding a brief from IAR which Prof. C.A Echekwu promised to
present to ARCN.
Prof Voh said that “the council will be interested to know
your effort as regards legume and oil seeds programme on cowpea. I want a brief
on it for me to interface with FMARD for the next step of action as two gaps
have been identified which borders on low productivity and export challenges”
He added there was need for economic analysis
of research technologies that farmers can easily off take saying “ farmers face
difficulties in obtaining knowledge and services that could improve their
cultivation practices, increase their production outputs, reduce drudgery,
reduce post-harvest losses and provide for them with acess to reliable market
and policy information”
The Country
Director, SAA-SG2000, Prof. Sani Miko Ahmead pointed that farmers want tools that
would farm, plant and harvest in order to reduce production cost and reduce
drudgery saying scientist must come up with solution as he frown on the
agricultural professional practitioners pointed they need just one umbrella to
fight unprofessionalism in the sector in Nigeria.
The opening
paper at the REFILs by former Director, NAERLs, and now a WACOT consultant, Dr.
Mohammed Umaru commended the effort of research and extension services saying
the government and private sectors’ inputs and credit agencies were the ones
that have failed the agricultural system due to untimely responsiveness to
improved seeds, fertilizers cum mechanization and credit provision to farmers
saying all these were not in the custody of researchers and extension
officers.
Dr. Umaru
said that the input agencies have let down the nation’s agricultural
productivity as they have not adequately given to farmers seeds and fertilizers
on time that would meet appropriate planting seasons when all scientists and
extension must have done their own parts pointed that government and private
agencies always fail in given loan, seeds, fertilizer, mechanization etc. on
time, but not researcher or extension workers’ fault.
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