Rescue plan for the endangered African indigenous vegetable varieties launched

By Guardian Reporter , The Guardian
Published at 11:27 AM Sep 09 2024
The retired Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda (L), chairman of the President Food and Agriculture Delivery Council, alongside Dr. Marco Wopereis (2nd L), director general of the World Vegetable Center, and Dr. Gabriel Rugalema ( R)
Photo: Guardian Correspondent
The retired Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda (L), chairman of the President Food and Agriculture Delivery Council, alongside Dr. Marco Wopereis (2nd L), director general of the World Vegetable Center, and Dr. Gabriel Rugalema ( R)

THE World Vegetable Center (WVC) in partnership with Crop Trust, African Union Development Agency (CTAUDA) and African Union Commission launched a robust rescue plan for the endangered African indigenous vegetable varieties, many of which are on the road to extinction, following thousands of others that have disappeared.

The ten-year plan, dubbed: ‘Vegetable Biodiversity Rescue’, unveiled on the sidelines of the Africa Food Systems Forum (AFSF) in Kigali, brought attention to the precarious state vegetable varieties are in, highlighting what needs to be done.

Dr. Gabriel Rugalema, the World Vegetable Center Associate Director General for Africa, said climate change and rapid urbanization are some of the drivers of this vegetable species extinction.

He also said poor farming practices as well as the implosion of exotic vegetable varieties on the continent, has rendered many of the African indigenous unattractive in markets since they now have little to no financial value, hence being neglected by farmers.

“Effects of climate change, like droughts, floods, and urbanization pose the most danger to indigenous African vegetable varieties, this rescue plan is an opportunity to bring other stakeholders in this response to save our vegetable species” said Rugalema.

For the next ten years, a total of $12 million will be needed every year to implement the rescue plan. The plan will touch four components, rescue and conservation, generating and sharing seed and information, partnerships and enabling policies as well as education and mainstreaming vegetable seed varieties.

Studies show that there is a 50 percent loss of economic loss as a result of decline of agro- biodiversity, and a major part of this being indigenous African vegetables. Among other things, the rescue plan will simultaneously address supply, demand, and policy challenges.

It is also aligned with global, continental and national frameworks that have components which aim to improve the rescue, conservation and sustainable use of agrobiodiversity.

Governments and the private sector have in the past been slow at investing in seed banks and research to safeguard these vegetables, many of which are not only nutritious but also climate change resistant.

“The knowledge around these species has also been lost in many traditional communities “Africa is also home to many vegetable species whose wild relatives are endangered and disappearing, largely due to urbanization and climate change, for example the wild relatives of cowpeas which is originally domesticated in Africa have disappeared” said Dr Sognigbe N’Danikou, Scientist, Traditional vegetable conservation and utilization at World Vegetable Center.

Noting that the rescue project is among other things trying to collect seeds of these wild varieties, and conserve them so they can be bred in the future. Almost 90 percent of the seeds grown in Africa come from farmer-managed seed systems, and if the plan is adequately implemented, seed breeding programs will be stimulated on the continent.

Humans have been consuming 7000 plant species for food, but recent studies have indicated that this diversity has been shrinking to 5000.

Dr. Sognigbe said there is need to invest in conservation infrastructures at national levels such that there are functional gene banks that can preserve and replicate what farmers have, so that varieties can be preserved before they are lost.

He said other challenges include weak seed systems, and low technical capacity for vegetable research, seed technology, plant breeding, and agronomy, postharvest and processing. It has been indicated that mainstreaming African vegetables into food systems would support achievement of UN SDG2 (zero hunger).