In Africa, weed control takes aim at parasitic striga
The multiple hazards confronting crop and livestock production
in Africa sometimes seem almost to be vying with one another to create the
greatest havoc. Drought, locusts, mealybugs, rinderpest, tsetse flies - all have
been targeted as major impediments to the continent's efforts to achieve greater
food security.
Now add to that list striga, a parasitic weed that attaches
itself to the roots of several of Africa's most important food crops, siphoning
off moisture and nutrients, inhibiting growth, and sometimes completely
destroying the host plant, especially under the stress of drought. At serious
risk to its depredations are about two thirds of the 73 million hectares devoted
to cereal crop production in Africa. Heaviest losses occur in savannah zones
stretching from Cape Verde on the west coast through western, central, eastern,
and southern regions of the continent, a sweep that also embraces major food
legume producing areas in most of the affected countries. Yields of cowpea,
maize, millet, sorghum, rice and sugar cane have all been considerably reduced
by striga infestations.
Quantifying the actual economic loss is extremely difficult, but
its general scale of magnitude may be judged from the range of estimates that
reach from around $500 million dollars annually to as high as $7 billion, this
latter calculation arising from an eight-year-long survey involving a number of
scientific institutes concerned with suppressing the weed.
Whatever may be the difference in estimates of damages
attributable to striga, there appears to be general agreement that these food
losses are increasing at an alarming rate. There are also other equally
disturbing elements in the situation:
- Control of striga is extremely difficult because the plant
produces myriads (as many as 40 000 per plant) of minuscule, powder-like seeds
that may remain dormant - but viable in the soil for as long as 20 years,
depending on climatic conditions, germinating only under the stimulus exuded
from potential host plants, or, in some cases, from certain non-host plants.
Since the initial parasitic growth generates from the roots of the host plant,
considerable damage may already have been caused before farmers become aware of
striga's presence above ground.
- Because they are least able to afford conventional methods of
striga control, small farmers are most vulnerable to its infestations.
- While plant scientists do not claim to understand fully the
causes of the present more rapid spread of striga, they now acknowledge that
there is a possible link with continuous cereal cultivation and consequent
decreases in soil fertility.
To tackle these problems, FAO and the Organization of African
Unity (OAU) have proposed an intensive programme aimed especially at helping
small-scale farmers to control the weed. Over the past couple of years this
programme has sponsored a technical workshop and an all-Africa government
consultation that have succeeded in collecting, and in exchanging among
scientists, planners, and potential donor agencies, a considerable body of
information about the nature of the striga problem and various experiences in
attempting to control it. The recently released report of the FAO/OAU Government
Consultation on Striga Control, held in Maroua (Cameroon) last October, remarked
that "Yield losses attributed to striga damage cannot be over-emphasized in view
of the importance of the host crop in the daily diet of the people affected. The
small-scale farmer, who must grow cereals to feed his family, is helpless since,
in the past, there were no effective striga control methods available to him. In
most African countries, the small scale farmer practice of hoeing to control
weeds is not only ineffective for controlling striga, but it is also
labour-intensive and results in further depletion of nutrients and moisture in
the already impoverished soil. Until recently, governments and international
agencies have failed to recognize the economic impact of striga let alone help
the small-scale farmer in his predicament."
More practical help may, however, be on the way. Dr L. J.
Matthews, a weed specialist with FAO for the past ten years, is optimistic about
the potential of a package of cultural practices recently developed and field
tested in the Gambia as a measure that could be adopted by small-scale farmers
to control the weed. Funded by the Permanent Interstate Committee for Drought
Control in the Sahel (CILSS) this research programme identified a number of
control "packages" that were effective for both sorghum and millet. These
included: the use of striga-tolerant varieties, side dressing of urea fertilizer
four weeks after planting, spot spraying of emerging striga shoots with contact
herbicide using a hand sprayer, and tethering cattle in the fields after harvest
whenever possible. For millet, strip cropping has proved an additional useful
practice.
The important point, in Dr Matthews' view, is that weed control
measures should be compatible with sound soil conservation practices. He cites
the results from comparisons of four differing sets of weed-control practices
tested in the Gambia, two of which depended on minimum tillage techniques; the
other two involved much greater amounts of cultivation by both humans and
animals. Using a jab planter for seeding and restricting weed control to a 20-cm
band on either side row reduced labour requirements by about 50 per cent in the
case where the band was hand weeded, or roughly 90 per cent if a herbicide was
used. And yields were from 25 to 50 per cent higher than in the more traditional
cultivation methods that involved shifting some 500 to 1000 tons of soil per
hectare.
The Government Consultation was sufficiently impressed by these
results that it recommended that the applicability of these packages should be
verified in various national programmes. Since CILSS funding for the Gambia
programme ran out early this year, the Consultation also recommended a meeting
of donors as a matter of urgency.
Peter
Hendry