NERICA: A Hope for Fighting Hunger and Poverty in Africa  

Tondi Yacouba Nassirou , Yuqing He
National Key Laboratory of Crop Genetic Improvement, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, 430070, P.R. China
Author    Correspondence author
Molecular Plant Breeding, 2011, Vol. 2, No. 11   doi: 10.5376/mpb.2011.02.0011
Received: 25 May, 2011    Accepted: 19 Jun., 2011    Published: 04 Jul., 2011
© 2011 BioPublisher Publishing Platform
This is an open access article published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Preferred citation for this article:

Nassirou and He , 2011, NERICA: A Hope for Fighting Hunger and Poverty in Africa, Molecular Plant Breeding Vol.2 No.11 (doi: 10.5376/mpb.2011.02.0011)

Abstract

NERICA (new rice for Africa), a new promising African upland rice species, is getting into the limelight in West-Africa, it has been developed through crossing African rice species (known for resistant to disease and drought) and Asian rice species (for its high yield potential) with the assistance from Japan, UNDP and other organizations. Its varieties are being hailed as a “miracle crop” that can bring Africa its long-promised green revolution in rice that is why a powerful coalition of governments, research institutes, private seed companies and donors are leading a major effort to spread NERICA seeds to all the continent’s rice fields. At first, the NERICA researchers insisted that they did not intend NERICA to replace local diversity. Indeed, the incorporation of new seeds is nothing new for African farmers because as usual, new varieties are often mixed with old ones and become part of the selection process, contributing to the local genetic heritage, and now it is perfectly adapted to the harsh growing environment and low-input conditions of upland rice ecologies in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where smallholder farmers lack the means to irrigate and apply chemical fertilizers or pesticides and it responds even better to higher inputs. This promising new rice for Africa combine high yield, short duration, resistance to pest and diseases, more protein and amino-acid content, iron and zinc, and an acceptable taste, and since its creation so far, the New Rice for Africa (NERICA) has carved a special niche for itself among upland rice farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA): today, it is a symbol of hope for food security in the SSA and as the Africa rice center declares with pride on its web pages, the New Rice for Africa, a technology from Africa for Africa, has become a symbol of hope for food security in a region of the world where one-third of the people are undernourished and half the population struggle to survive on US $1 a day or less; also the Africa rice center director-general Papa Abdoulaye Seck comments, “NERICA is a powerful weapon on Africa’s fight against hunger and poverty”.

Keywords
NERICA; Sub-Saharan Africa; Embryo rescue; Rice
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