Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta

The principal advantage of in situ conservation is that it allows adaptive evolutionary processes to continue in the species that are being conserved. For a cultivated crop species, in situ conservation involves farmers' management of their own genetic resources even as the farmers themselves adapt to a changing environment. Improved seed selection practices and other on-farm breeding strategies have been proposed as a means of providing economic incentives for farmers to continue growing traditional varieties or landraces identified as important for conservation. this paper describes a pilot study among a group of indigenous farmers in the Sierra de Santa Marta, Veracruz, Mexico, who have collaborated in such efforts. The finding rise key issues about the potential impact of such an approach, as well as some useful methodological points for applied economists. In the study area, there is a high frecuency of experimentation, exchange, loss, and replacement of seed over ime - seed of the same varieties, including both modern and traditional varieties. This poses a challenge for economists models of varietal choice, wich tend to based on static perceptions of a "variety" as well as simplistic distinctions between "modern" and "traditional" varieties. Seed selection in the study area is not a single event but an iterative, continuous process. Women may be more involved in seed selection than previously though, wich may have implications for the welfare impact of new seed selection practices. Other implications of the study are that (1) the impact of introducing practices to enhance farmers' varieties is likely to be diffuse and difficult to observe, predict, or measure, and (2) in developing analytical models of farmer decision-making as it affects the diversity of genetic resources on the farm, the most apropriate unit of analysis for predicting the effects of some policy interventions is not likely to be the individual farmer or the individual farm household. A better understanding of the "social infrastructure" shaping seed and information flows is needed, since in the diffusion of innovations of this type, the seed system is based entirely on farmers and their interactions.

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Main Authors: Rice, E., Smale, M., Blanco Rosas, J.L.
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 1997
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, CROP MANAGEMENT, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES, INNOVATION ADOPTION, MAIZE, PRODUCTIVITY, GENETIC RESOURCES,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/950
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-9502021-02-09T18:25:21Z Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta Rice, E. Smale, M. Blanco Rosas, J.L. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY CROP MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC ANALYSIS HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES INNOVATION ADOPTION MAIZE PRODUCTIVITY GENETIC RESOURCES CROP MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC ANALYSIS HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES INNOVATION ADOPTION MAIZE PRODUCTIVITY GENETIC RESOURCES The principal advantage of in situ conservation is that it allows adaptive evolutionary processes to continue in the species that are being conserved. For a cultivated crop species, in situ conservation involves farmers' management of their own genetic resources even as the farmers themselves adapt to a changing environment. Improved seed selection practices and other on-farm breeding strategies have been proposed as a means of providing economic incentives for farmers to continue growing traditional varieties or landraces identified as important for conservation. this paper describes a pilot study among a group of indigenous farmers in the Sierra de Santa Marta, Veracruz, Mexico, who have collaborated in such efforts. The finding rise key issues about the potential impact of such an approach, as well as some useful methodological points for applied economists. In the study area, there is a high frecuency of experimentation, exchange, loss, and replacement of seed over ime - seed of the same varieties, including both modern and traditional varieties. This poses a challenge for economists models of varietal choice, wich tend to based on static perceptions of a "variety" as well as simplistic distinctions between "modern" and "traditional" varieties. Seed selection in the study area is not a single event but an iterative, continuous process. Women may be more involved in seed selection than previously though, wich may have implications for the welfare impact of new seed selection practices. Other implications of the study are that (1) the impact of introducing practices to enhance farmers' varieties is likely to be diffuse and difficult to observe, predict, or measure, and (2) in developing analytical models of farmer decision-making as it affects the diversity of genetic resources on the farm, the most apropriate unit of analysis for predicting the effects of some policy interventions is not likely to be the individual farmer or the individual farm household. A better understanding of the "social infrastructure" shaping seed and information flows is needed, since in the diffusion of innovations of this type, the seed system is based entirely on farmers and their interactions. vi, 41 pages 2012-01-06T05:08:21Z 2012-01-06T05:08:21Z 1997 Book 0258-8587 http://hdl.handle.net/10883/950 English Economics Working Paper 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 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
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
Rice, E.
Smale, M.
Blanco Rosas, J.L.
Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
description The principal advantage of in situ conservation is that it allows adaptive evolutionary processes to continue in the species that are being conserved. For a cultivated crop species, in situ conservation involves farmers' management of their own genetic resources even as the farmers themselves adapt to a changing environment. Improved seed selection practices and other on-farm breeding strategies have been proposed as a means of providing economic incentives for farmers to continue growing traditional varieties or landraces identified as important for conservation. this paper describes a pilot study among a group of indigenous farmers in the Sierra de Santa Marta, Veracruz, Mexico, who have collaborated in such efforts. The finding rise key issues about the potential impact of such an approach, as well as some useful methodological points for applied economists. In the study area, there is a high frecuency of experimentation, exchange, loss, and replacement of seed over ime - seed of the same varieties, including both modern and traditional varieties. This poses a challenge for economists models of varietal choice, wich tend to based on static perceptions of a "variety" as well as simplistic distinctions between "modern" and "traditional" varieties. Seed selection in the study area is not a single event but an iterative, continuous process. Women may be more involved in seed selection than previously though, wich may have implications for the welfare impact of new seed selection practices. Other implications of the study are that (1) the impact of introducing practices to enhance farmers' varieties is likely to be diffuse and difficult to observe, predict, or measure, and (2) in developing analytical models of farmer decision-making as it affects the diversity of genetic resources on the farm, the most apropriate unit of analysis for predicting the effects of some policy interventions is not likely to be the individual farmer or the individual farm household. A better understanding of the "social infrastructure" shaping seed and information flows is needed, since in the diffusion of innovations of this type, the seed system is based entirely on farmers and their interactions.
format Book
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
CROP MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HIGH YIELDING VARIETIES
INNOVATION ADOPTION
MAIZE
PRODUCTIVITY
GENETIC RESOURCES
author Rice, E.
Smale, M.
Blanco Rosas, J.L.
author_facet Rice, E.
Smale, M.
Blanco Rosas, J.L.
author_sort Rice, E.
title Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
title_short Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
title_full Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
title_fullStr Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
title_full_unstemmed Farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in Mexican maize: evidence and issues from the Sierra de Santa Marta
title_sort farmers' use of improved seed selection practices in mexican maize: evidence and issues from the sierra de santa marta
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 1997
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/950
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