ICRISAT
Happenings
20 December 2013 No. 1602
In-house Newsletter
Photo: PS Rao, ICRISAT
Photo: ICRISAT
Farmers from Tanzania’s Babati District, including women, showing off to Drs Jeff Ehlers and ES Monyo the motorbikes they purchased out of the profits made from the sale of pigeonpeas.
Tropical Legumes II project boosts crop yields in Tanzania
T
anzania is witnessing a sharp increase in the area under tropical legumes and their productivity. Technologies and linkages developed during Tropical Legumes II (TL II) project implementation have been the catalysts in the growth process. Since its inception, TL II has helped expand pigeonpea area across the country from 125,000 ha in 2008 to 288,160 ha by 2011. Meanwhile, production doubled from 111,540 to 272,610 tons during the period and crop yield increased from 892 to 946 kg/ha. “Our lives have changed positively. We have built new homes, our children now attend school and some of us have even ventured into new businesses,” farmers from Tanzania’s Babati District told Dr Jeff Ehlers, TL II Program Officer, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation during his visit to their farms.
Dr Ehlers was accompanied by ICRISAT’s Dr Emmanuel Monyo, Project Coordinator, TL II and Dr Jean-Claude Rubyogo, Seed Systems Objective leader from the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT). The team visited project sites in the country on 6 - 8 December to interact with project partners and review the project’s progress. Tanzania is one of the Gates Foundation’s anchor countries for the project, which is being jointly implemented by ICRISAT, the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and CIAT in collaboration with 15 National Agricultural Research Systems (NARS) partners in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Groundnut, cowpea, common bean, chickpea and pigeonpea are the project’s targeted crops in Tanzania. to page 2 ...4