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Economic impact analysis of marker-assisted breeding for resistance to pests and post-harvest deterioration in cassava

Published by:
Publication date
28/06/2010
Language:
English
Type of Publication:
Articles & Journals
Focus Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Focus Topic:
Health & Diseases
Type of Risk:
Biological & environmental
Commodity:
Crops
Source
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/r4d/PDF/Outputs/GenerationChallenge/GCP_rudi-et-al.pdf
Author
Rudi, N.; Norton, G.W.; Alwang, J.; Asumugha, G.

Marker-assisted breeding could have a major impact on relieving productivity constraints that cannot as easily or rapidly be relieved by conventional breeding alone. This paper estimates the benefits of using marker-assisted breeding, as compared to conventional breeding alone, in developing cassava varieties resistant to cassava mosaic disease, green mite, whitefly, and post-harvest physiological deterioration in Nigeria, Ghana, and Uganda. Marker-assisted breeding is estimated to save at least four years in the breeding cycle for varieties resistant to the pests and to result in incremental net benefits over 25 years in the range of $34 to $800 million depending on the country, the particular constraint and various assumptions. Benefits may reach as high as $3 billion for resistance to post-harvest physiological deterioration, as conventional breeding is not projected to solve the problem within a reasonable time frame.