CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future

Most people in the developing world depend directly or indirectly on agriculture for their livelihoods. Maize and wheat alone provide nearly half the food by weight and a quarter of the calories for the 4.9 billion people of the developing world. In much of Africa the land—which has to produce the food, sustain the farming systems for production, and nurture the crops that farmers grow—can not keep up with demand, even when conditions of climate and politics are stable. More than half a billion people depend on wheat or maize but have little or no access to agricultural inputs, farm on degraded soils, or have to make do in marginal climates. With a continuously growing population, less good land for agriculture, and climate and water constraints that seem to grow more severe each year, yesterday’s solutions are not sufficient for today. In this annual report for 2004-2005 we focus on one of the most severe constraints to production in wheat and maize farming systems—drought—and the approaches CIMMYT is taking to help farmers cope. A major priority is finding ways that maize and wheat can continue to produce high, stable yields with less available water. We are working both at the breeding level to develop plants that use water more efficiently and at the plot level to help farmers to conserve and better use what moisture they have. In the reports that follow, you will find accounts of progress by CIMMYT and its partners. For example CIMMYT has devised a “smart crossing” approach to produce wheat varieties with better drought tolerance, and uses a decentralized global shuttle breeding system—an extension of its time proven method in Mexico—to test and adapt drought tolerant varieties to diverse conditions around the world. Another trend to note is the adoption of conservation agriculture practices that save farmers soil, water, money, and time, in addition to bringing environmental benefits. This is global science for local impact.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Listman, G.M.
Format: Annual Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 2005
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, TRITICOSECALE, PLANT BREEDING, TRITICUM AESTIVUM, CEREALS, ZEA MAYS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/653
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cimmyt-10883-653
record_format koha
spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-6532023-08-29T22:53:55Z CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future Listman, G.M. Poland, D. Mowbray, D. Ouya, D. Baker, J. McNab, A. Castro, M.C. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY TRITICOSECALE PLANT BREEDING TRITICUM AESTIVUM CEREALS ZEA MAYS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES TRITICOSECALE PLANT BREEDING TRITICUM AESTIVUM CEREALS ZEA MAYS DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Most people in the developing world depend directly or indirectly on agriculture for their livelihoods. Maize and wheat alone provide nearly half the food by weight and a quarter of the calories for the 4.9 billion people of the developing world. In much of Africa the land—which has to produce the food, sustain the farming systems for production, and nurture the crops that farmers grow—can not keep up with demand, even when conditions of climate and politics are stable. More than half a billion people depend on wheat or maize but have little or no access to agricultural inputs, farm on degraded soils, or have to make do in marginal climates. With a continuously growing population, less good land for agriculture, and climate and water constraints that seem to grow more severe each year, yesterday’s solutions are not sufficient for today. In this annual report for 2004-2005 we focus on one of the most severe constraints to production in wheat and maize farming systems—drought—and the approaches CIMMYT is taking to help farmers cope. A major priority is finding ways that maize and wheat can continue to produce high, stable yields with less available water. We are working both at the breeding level to develop plants that use water more efficiently and at the plot level to help farmers to conserve and better use what moisture they have. In the reports that follow, you will find accounts of progress by CIMMYT and its partners. For example CIMMYT has devised a “smart crossing” approach to produce wheat varieties with better drought tolerance, and uses a decentralized global shuttle breeding system—an extension of its time proven method in Mexico—to test and adapt drought tolerant varieties to diverse conditions around the world. Another trend to note is the adoption of conservation agriculture practices that save farmers soil, water, money, and time, in addition to bringing environmental benefits. This is global science for local impact. 56 pages 2012-01-06T04:27:45Z 2012-01-06T04:27:45Z 2005 Annual Report 0188-9214 http://hdl.handle.net/10883/653 English CIMMYT Annual Report CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Mexico, DF (Mexico) CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
description Most people in the developing world depend directly or indirectly on agriculture for their livelihoods. Maize and wheat alone provide nearly half the food by weight and a quarter of the calories for the 4.9 billion people of the developing world. In much of Africa the land—which has to produce the food, sustain the farming systems for production, and nurture the crops that farmers grow—can not keep up with demand, even when conditions of climate and politics are stable. More than half a billion people depend on wheat or maize but have little or no access to agricultural inputs, farm on degraded soils, or have to make do in marginal climates. With a continuously growing population, less good land for agriculture, and climate and water constraints that seem to grow more severe each year, yesterday’s solutions are not sufficient for today. In this annual report for 2004-2005 we focus on one of the most severe constraints to production in wheat and maize farming systems—drought—and the approaches CIMMYT is taking to help farmers cope. A major priority is finding ways that maize and wheat can continue to produce high, stable yields with less available water. We are working both at the breeding level to develop plants that use water more efficiently and at the plot level to help farmers to conserve and better use what moisture they have. In the reports that follow, you will find accounts of progress by CIMMYT and its partners. For example CIMMYT has devised a “smart crossing” approach to produce wheat varieties with better drought tolerance, and uses a decentralized global shuttle breeding system—an extension of its time proven method in Mexico—to test and adapt drought tolerant varieties to diverse conditions around the world. Another trend to note is the adoption of conservation agriculture practices that save farmers soil, water, money, and time, in addition to bringing environmental benefits. This is global science for local impact.
author2 Listman, G.M.
author_facet Listman, G.M.
format Annual Report
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
TRITICOSECALE
PLANT BREEDING
TRITICUM AESTIVUM
CEREALS
ZEA MAYS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
title CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
title_short CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
title_full CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
title_fullStr CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
title_full_unstemmed CIMMYT Annual Report 2004-2005: A solid future
title_sort cimmyt annual report 2004-2005: a solid future
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/653
_version_ 1775949578794696704