Markets of Biodiversity
Under a tree in a sandy village center on the fringes of the
Sahara Desert, women display baskets of millet and handmade wares
to prospective customers. After successive years of poor harvests
in this harsh environment, farmers who typically rely on themselves
or their relatives for seed are obliged to seek it here. They
peruse the small amounts of grain women from nearby villages have
brought from family granaries. One asks a woman if her grain comes
from Tabi, a village nestled in the rocky hills some 20 kilometers
away and known for its early-maturing varieties of millet.
Answering in the dialect of Dogon, the woman confirms it is a Tabi
variety.
Nearly every meal consumed by rural families in drier areas of
Mali is based on millet. Although these women most often sell grain
for food, their small-scale trade gives other farmers access to
vital seeds when both the formal and the informal seed systems
fail. Despite the gradual liberalization of the formal seed sector
in Mali, no certified seeds are sold yet by traders - either men or
women - in local markets. The supply of certified seed continues to
be dominated by state institutions and agricultural development and
extension services.
"Where formal seed systems for certified seed have limited
reach, farmers continue to depend primarily on themselves or their
social ties for seed," says Melinda Smale, a senior research
fellow of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
"Farmers are very resourceful at finding seed."
Researchers were surprised to discover that local grain markets
can provide a form of seed insurance in case of disaster or
drought. Village grain markets become especially active as seed
markets just before planting season. They're also important
later for replanting if the rains that watered the first planting
were followed by a dry spell, and after successive years of crop
failure, when whole communities find themselves short of seed.
Farmers who sell grain that is suitable for seed may be
supporting local crop biodiversity by exchanging genetic resources
with a particularly valuable trait, such as early maturity. The
team also found that women vendors most often use the money they
earn by selling millet to purchase ingredients that add important
nutrients to the sauces they prepare for the families' daily
millet porridge. The research was conducted by IFPRI, the Institut
d'Economie Rurale of Mali and Bioversity International as part
of a collaborative project lead by FAO, and builds on the findings
of a seed security assessment conducted by Catholic Relief Services
(CRS) and partners. Findings of the CRS study raise the possibility
that, when grain is sold as seed with recognized, valued
attributes, vendors are "trading plant genetic
resources".
Generally, grain markets are not thought to be good sources of
seed because the vendor does not know the variety or whether the
grain of several varieties has been mixed. In this case, however,
farmers in search of seed know that the grain is suitable for
planting because it comes directly from the farmer. Farmer-vendors
know about the variety and its characteristics. For the customers,
knowing the village of origin is also important, as varieties have
a very narrow range of adaptation in this agroclimatic zone, often
as little as 40 kilometers across.
The major policy challenge in Mali today, says Smale, is how to
develop grain markets into markets for seed. One option is to
legalize the sale in village markets of the seed of local varieties
that are truthfully labeled, but formalizing the trade of women
vendors may not meet the desired objectives of enhancing their
welfare. Exchanging millet seed for cash carries social stigma in a
culture where farmers have managed the selection and planting of
millet varieties for millennia, probably since the crop was
domesticated. A fundamental step would seem to be supplying
vendors, perhaps through farmers' associations, with small
packets of certified seed that has been proven to perform well in
this environment. Local nongovernmental organizations are
experimenting with seed auctions and fairs to encourage more
cash-based exchange of seed.
Supporting the development of local seed markets in the right
way will ensure that Malian farmers have access to the genetic
diversity they need to combat drought and locust attacks.
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