Abstract:
|
Research on indigenous fruit and nuts has accumulated considerably in Sub-Saharan Africa, and their role is being recognized in the domain of poverty reduction. An ex ante impact analyses in southern Africa indicate that indigenous fruit can reduce vulnerability of rural households to income poverty. Hence, research has been on-going on development of long-term domestication strategies, selection of priority species, germplasm collection and tree genetic improvement, propagation systems and field management, harvesting and post-harvest technology, economic analysis and market research. There are similarities in the approaches and lessons learnt in different regions, especially in West and southern Africa. The selection, management and cultivation of IFTs are generally characterized by integration of silvicultural and horticultural approaches. Time to fruiting of wild fruit trees have been reduced from more than 12 years in the wild to less than four years in all the three regions. This paper provides synthesizes available studies on the domestication of indigenous fruit trees as tree crops, and commercializing their products, highlights the lessons learnt and provided the way forward to tap into the opportunities presented by IFTs to enhance food security and income generation in sub-Saharan Africa |