2020
DOI: 10.1111/ijfs.14684
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A review of varietal change in roots, tubers and bananas: consumer preferences and other drivers of adoption and implications for breeding

Abstract: This review of the literature on varietal change in sub-Saharan Africa looks in detail at adoption of new varieties of bananas in Uganda, cassava in Nigeria, potato in Kenya, sweetpotato in Uganda and yams in Côte d'Ivoire. The review explored three hypotheses about drivers of varietal change. There was a strong confirmation for the hypothesis that insufficient priority given to consumer-preferred traits by breeding programmes contributes to the limited uptake of modern varieties (MVs) and low varietal turnove… Show more

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Cited by 113 publications
(133 citation statements)
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“…Papers address key problems in the breeding of RTB crops in SSA: inadequate understanding of requirements for different end uses, missing information on the physicochemical factors determining these requirements and absence of high‐throughput screening protocols. The review papers provide a broad overview of RTB production and use trends (Scott, 2021), describe case studies of varietal change (replacing old varieties with new ones) (Thiele et al ., 2021), summarise analytical methods for rapid quality assessment of yam and cassava using near‐infrared spectroscopy (Alamu et al ., 2021), describe gari end‐user preferences (Awoyale et al ., 2021) and review the literature to develop a product profile for fried sweet potato in West Africa (Carey et al ., 2021).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Papers address key problems in the breeding of RTB crops in SSA: inadequate understanding of requirements for different end uses, missing information on the physicochemical factors determining these requirements and absence of high‐throughput screening protocols. The review papers provide a broad overview of RTB production and use trends (Scott, 2021), describe case studies of varietal change (replacing old varieties with new ones) (Thiele et al ., 2021), summarise analytical methods for rapid quality assessment of yam and cassava using near‐infrared spectroscopy (Alamu et al ., 2021), describe gari end‐user preferences (Awoyale et al ., 2021) and review the literature to develop a product profile for fried sweet potato in West Africa (Carey et al ., 2021).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As progress in these basic requirements has been met, they must now focus on end‐product quality traits and processor and consumer preferences for quality characteristics. Processing ability and quality of end products are a common issue across improved varieties of RTBs, and this can contribute to low levels of varietal adoption and its subsequent benefits (Thiele et al ., 2021).…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Often, farmers and processors will prefer earlier varieties, higher yielding and more dense/heavy (dry matter) roots but they will then assume that any new root will have the same quality of the varieties they are used to. Thiele et al (2020) show, using data from a large cassava adoption study (Wossen et al, 2017), that in Nigeria, the largest area attributed to improved varieties is occupied by unreleased breeders' material that are either the result of escaped clones from breeder trials or clones grown from botanic seed from released or unreleased material. This supports the case that it is not access to improved varieties that results into low adoption but makes a case for a large part of released varieties not living up to the quality characteristics assumed to be present in an 'improved' variety.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies on hybrid evaluation and adoption in cassava, banana and rice hybrids show that despite the huge investments, adoption rates for hybrids are low as often they do not meet market needs that are driven by end-user preference (Sebasigari, 1996;Bechoff et al, 2018;Joshi & Bauer, 2006;Smale, & Tushemereirwe, 2007;Asante, 2013;Thiele et al, 2021). Farmers' perceptions and experiences about the attributes of varieties are important factors that influence their variety use decisions (Wale, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%