FAO |
· * Train extension workers to control Fall
Armyworm
As part
of the efforts to ensure sustainable food and nutrition security in Nigeria,
the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (UN) trained
extension workers on the management and control of the Fall Armyworm
(FAW).
The crop-eating moth, which have
devastated maize crop in over 40 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, remains a
scourge for farmers in the region.
The
government of Nigeria, through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and FAO,
signed a Technical Cooperation
Project (TCP) agreement in 2017 to
curtail the spread of Fall Armyworm in Nigeria.
Believed
to have originated from the Americas, the FAW, was reported for the first time
in Nigeria and some African countries in 2016. Biologically called Spodoptera frugiperda, the pest has
a migratory habit and can spread fast, eating up crops on its path.
Though with a
special preference for maize, the invasive pest is capable of feeding on over
80 different crop species, like, sorghum, peanut, soybean, cowpea, cotton,
sweet corn, forage, and others, causing severe effects on food production
output and livelihoods.
FAO Country
Representative to Nigeria, Suffyan Koroma at the opening of the training
workshop in Kaduna, charged the extension workers to take advantage of the FAW
resource materials developed by FAO coupled with what they have learned to
ensure that the impact on farmers within their communities are minimal.
FAO is working
in 12 states (Borno, Kaduna, Jigawa, Katsina, Kano, Abia, Oyo, Ekiti, Ondo,
Kwara, Osun states and the Federal Capital Territory, FCT), giving training to
extension workers on FAW basic biology,
ecology, monitoring technique, reporting, biological control, cultural control,
pest risk reduction, good agricultural practices (GAP), Integrated pest
management (IPM), and farmer field
school (FFS) approach.
Koroma said,
“FAO has continued to build and strengthen national capacity by conducting
training and creating awareness to relevant stakeholders, especially
agriculture and extension workers, on how to manage and control the pest. This
training will be scaled-up to more states of the country”.
Beside the Fall
Armyworm Monitoring and Early Warning System (FAMNEWS), an android app
developed by FAO to guide farmer and extension workers on real time detection
and management of the FAW pest, other platforms are also made available to assist
farmers. Support with production inputs such as, maize seed, fertilizer,
herbicide, backpack Knapsack sprayer equipment and personal protective
equipment (PPE), to mitigate the effect of the pest and its consequences on
their yields, is also made available.
Participants at
the training, drawn from six states namely, Borno, Kaduna, Jigawa, Katsina,
Kano and the FCT, will trickle down the knowledge that they have learned by
being able to provide extension support to farmers in their communities, effectively
monitor and report, and offer support that would reduce the risk of the pest
invading farmlands without control.
A similar
training held in Ibadan, Oyo state in February this year empowered the trained
extension workers in 6 southern and eastern states of Nigeria (namely Abia,
Oyo, Ekiti, Ondo, Kwara, Osun states). The training enabled them to provide
adequate capacity to scale down the training to different groups and
individuals in their various locations, with impactful results.
The next phase
of the training activities will target farmers directly in all the 12 states
covered by the project.
No comments:
Post a Comment