Crop variety management for climate adaptation supported by citizen science
View/ Open
Date
2019Author
Etten, Jacob van
Sousa, Kauê Feitosa Dias de
Aguilar, Amílcar
Barrios Aguirre, Mirna
Coto, A.
Dell'Acqua, Matteo
Fadda, Carlo.
Gebrehawaryat, Yosef
Gevel, Jeske van de
Gupta, Arnab
Kiros, Afewerki Y.
Madriz, Brandon
Mengistue, Dejene K.
Mathur, Prem
Mercado, Leida
Mohammed, Jemal Nurhisen
Paliwal, Ambica
Enrico Pe, Mario
Quiros, Carlos F.
Rosas, Juan Carlos
Sharmag, Neeraj
Singh, S. S.
Solank, Iswhar S.
Steinke, Jonathan
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Crop adaptation to climate change requires accelerated crop
variety introduction accompanied by recommendations to help
farmers match the best variety with their field contexts. Existing
approaches to generate these recommendations lack scalability
and predictivity in marginal production environments. We
tested if crowdsourced citizen science can address this challenge,
producing empirical data across geographic space that, in aggregate,
can characterize varietal climatic responses. We present the
results of 12,409 farmer-managed experimental plots of common
bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) in Nicaragua, durum wheat (Triticum
durum Desf.) in Ethiopia, and bread wheat (Triticum aestivum
L.) in India. Farmers collaborated as citizen scientists, each ranking
the performance of three varieties randomly assigned from a
larger set.We show that the approach can register known specific
effects of climate variation on varietal performance. The prediction
of variety performance from seasonal climatic variables was
generalizable across growing seasons. We show that these analyses
can improve variety recommendations in four aspects: reduction
of climate bias, incorporation of seasonal climate forecasts,
risk analysis, and geographic extrapolation. Variety recommendations
derived from the citizen science trials led to important
differences with previous recommendations.
Publisher
PNAS
URI (Permanet link to cite or share this item)
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/9273https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1813720116
Collections
- Publicaciones y documentos [4425]