TOWARDS THE DEVELOPMENT OF MIOMBO FRUIT TREES AS COMMERCIAL TREE CROPS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
Date
2666-01-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Many rural households rely on indigenous fruit trees as sources of cash and subsistence in the
Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), but until recently there has been little effort to
cultivate, improve or add value to these fruits. Since 1989 the International Centre for Research
in Agroforestry (lCRAF: now the World Agroforestry Centre) initiated research-and-development
work on more than 20 priority indigenous fruit trees in five SADC countries aimed at improving
income in rural communities. A participatory approach was used in all stages of their domestication,
product development and commercialization. Country-specific priority species were identified in
five countries based on discussions with a wide range of users. These species have now become
the focus of a regional tree domestication programme. An impact analysis indicates that a robust
domestication programme will create incentives for farmer-led investment in the cultivation of
indigenous fruit trees, as an alternative to wild fruit collection, especially where there is a decrease
in fruit abundance. In Zimbabwe, the returns to family labour of collecting wild fruits are two
to three times greater than other farming activities. These returns will be further increased by
domestication.
Progress in the domestication of four priority fruit tree species Uapaca kirkiana, Strychnos
cocculoides, Parinari curatellifolia and Sclerocarya birrea from the miombo woodlands in southern
Africa is reviewed. Preliminary results indicate that the long juvenile phase of Uapaca kirkiana can
be shortened from 12-16 years to less than four years, using vegetative propagation methods .
.r----)n-going multidisciplinary tree crop domestication research includes molecular genetic analyses,
....•••• sue culture, post-harvest storage, production economics, nutritional analyses, market and supply
chain surveys, processing and feasibility assessments of pilot enterprises. Holistic plans are needed
to promote cultivation and ensure product quality on farms and to maximize competitiveness at the
farm gate and throughout the supply chain.
Description
TOWARDS THE DEVELOPMENT OF MIOMBO FRUIT
TREES AS COMMERCIAL TREE CROPS IN SOUTHERN
AFRICA
Keywords
Agroforestry tree products, enterprise development, livelihoods, participatory domestication. rural incomes
Citation
F. K. AKINNIFESI , F. KWESIGA , J. MHANGO , T. CHILANGA , A. MKONDA , C. A.C. KADU , .I. KADZERE, D. MITHOFER , J. D.K. SAKA, G. SILESHI, T. RAMADHANI a P. DHLlWAYO (2006): TOWARDSTHE DEVELOPMENT OF MIOMBO FRUIT TREESAS COMMERCIALTREE CROPSIN SOUTHERNAFRICA, Forests, Trees and Livelihoods, 16: 1, 103-121 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14728028.2006. 9752548