2014
DOI: 10.5539/jas.v6n12p126
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Farmers’ Perceptions of Finger Millet Production Constraints, Varietal Preferences and Their Implications to Finger Millet Breeding in Uganda

Abstract: Finger millet is an important food security and cash crop in Uganda but its production is constrained by a number of factors. However, information on farmers' perceptions of constraints and varietal preferences is limited. A study was conducted to; identify varieties and varietal preferences in finger millet, and assess farmers' constraints to finger millet production and coping mechanisms. The study involved a participatory rural appraisal, and a survey. Farmers identified the major constraint as high labour … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
(12 reference statements)
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“…Weeds cause severe yield loss during the early growth stages of finger millet. In Ethiopia, yield losses of up to 73.5% have been reported due to weeds [23]. The most problematic weed species of finger millet in Ethiopia include Digitaria ternata (A.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Weeds cause severe yield loss during the early growth stages of finger millet. In Ethiopia, yield losses of up to 73.5% have been reported due to weeds [23]. The most problematic weed species of finger millet in Ethiopia include Digitaria ternata (A.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A participatory varietal selection (PVS) enables skilled farmers to select, both on-farm and on-station, the best performing varieties from a group of pre-evaluated seed selected by breeders (Witcombe, Gyawali, Sunwar, Sthapit, & Joshi, 2006). A PVS study done in Uganda revealed that finger millet farmers preferred high yielding, brown seed color, and medium height as the top most important attributes in an ideal variety, which should also harbor some resistance to major biotic and abiotic stresses (Owere, Tongoona, Derera, & Wanyera, 2014). Similar preferences have been observed among finger millet farmers in western Kenya, but would need to be confirmed in order to ensure farmers' needs are addressed during crop improvement.…”
Section: Crop Sciencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The farmers evaluated and ranked the best chosen traits of finger millet through Focused Group Discussions (FDG) and using a pairwise ranking matrix (Table 3), the best trait were selected for future breeding purposes. Pair-wise ranking and farmers' preference linked to high yielding, high tillering, resistance to diseases, grain color and good threshability (Owere et al, 2014;Watson, 2019;Sibiya et al, 2013). The farmers had a high preference for uniformity of finger millet (3.91).…”
Section: Farmer Preference Of Finger Millet Traitsmentioning
confidence: 99%