| Cassava
Disease Monitoring Goes Mobile
Mobile phones are the unlikely weapons
being used to fight cassava disease in Tanzania, in a collaboration
between scientists and farmers.
As part of the Digital Early Warning Network (DEWN) farmers
from ten districts in the Lake Zone region of Tanzania will
be trained to recognise the symptoms of Cassava Mosaic Disease
(CMD) and Cassava Brown Streak Disease (CBSD).
They will then send monthly text messages to the researchers
about disease incidence and receive disease control
advice in return.
CMD and CBSD are viral diseases that stunt the growth of
cassava crops and rot the roots respectively.
Each group of farmers 60 overall is given a
topped-up SIM card with which to text the researchers. They
then meet monthly to discuss observations and send the text
messages.
James Legg, a virologist at the International Institute of
Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in Tanzania and leader of the
project, says that DEWN is part of a larger project entitled
the Great Lakes Cassava Initiative (GLCI), which aims to improve
the livelihoods of more than a million farmers in six countries
of the Great Lakes region by tackling issues that affect cassava
yields.
The first part of DEWN, which started last month (June),
is the establishment of the farmer network by visiting the
groups to train them in recognising cassava disease and communicating
with researchers at the Lake Zone Agricultural Research and
Development Institute (LZARD).
Innocent Ndyetabura, a plant researcher at LZARD, says that
the project will not only build farmers' knowledge of cassava
diseases but also enable researchers to forecast disease prevalence
in threatened areas.
Legg says the benefits will be immediate as farmers will
also get access to other agricultural information from the
extension officers and researchers.
He adds that the near real-time information on the status
of the two major cassava crop diseases will be used to develop
maps hopefully within weeks of initial reports coming
from farmers.
"We will be able to put these together for the whole
region to produce a more comprehensive dataset on the regional
epidemiology of these diseases than has ever been achieved
previously."
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 8 July 2009

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