2018
DOI: 10.3390/su10103735
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Smallholders’ Preferences for Improved Quinoa Varieties in the Peruvian Andes

Abstract: Due to an increase in international demand, quinoa production has boomed tremendously in the Andes since the early 2010s. This has led to significant investments into developing improved varieties for large-scale agribusinesses, but breeding programs are not tailored to the needs of smallholders. In this paper, we study farmers’ preferences and willingness to pay for improved quinoa varieties in the Junín region in Peru. We use data from a choice experiment among 458 smallholders and estimate generalized multi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…In the Andes of Peru, quinoa has mostly been cultivated as a staple crop by smallholders, with limited resources that do not allow them to use advanced agricultural technology. In this ecoregion, small-scale farming has largely been practiced, characterized by low inputs, the restricted use of machinery and rain-fed irrigation [1,2]. However, in the last years, as a consequence of the increasing demand for quinoa on the international markets and the resulting export boom and crop expansion, farmer associations have been created.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Andes of Peru, quinoa has mostly been cultivated as a staple crop by smallholders, with limited resources that do not allow them to use advanced agricultural technology. In this ecoregion, small-scale farming has largely been practiced, characterized by low inputs, the restricted use of machinery and rain-fed irrigation [1,2]. However, in the last years, as a consequence of the increasing demand for quinoa on the international markets and the resulting export boom and crop expansion, farmer associations have been created.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Still, quinoa remains popular due to its high market value, worldwide demand, and abiotic stress tolerance. Therefore, efforts to convert quinoa into a major crop must aim to increase yield, achieve yield stability, and reduce the saponin content of the seed ( Rao and Shahid, 2012 ; Choukr-Allah et al , 2016 ; Ruiz et al , 2017 ; Gamboa et al , 2018 ; Präger et al , 2018 ). Because quinoa displays a natural resilience to adverse environmental factors, breeding goals for quinoa require crop improvements that optimize productivity with minimum inputs ( Zurita-Silva et al , 2014 ; Yabe and Iwata, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For agriculture, field or host resistance is still the most important way of controlling diseases because it leads to the most cost-effective ratio for the grower [ 109 , 110 , 111 ].The response to downy mildew in a diversity panel of 132 quinoa genotypes resulted in strong phenotypic variation with high disease trait heritability ( H 2 = 0.78 for severity, H 2 = 0.82 for sporulation). This variability was paired with the analysis of 603,871 SNPs in 61 genotypes with FarmCPU [ 52 ].…”
Section: Downy Mildew Of Quinoamentioning
confidence: 99%