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Kari’s new maize seeds promise higher yields
A Kari research showed that farmers made losses of up to Sh28,000 per hectare due to maize streak viruses alone. Photo/JARED NYATAYA
Posted Monday, May 31 2010 at 00:00
The Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (Kari) has released three new mid-altitude hybrid maize varieties, which researchers say guarantee farmers five to 10 per cent more yields.
The new breeds took Kari eight years to develop.
“These are conventional, not genetically modified,” said Phillip Leley, a breeding specialist, explaining why it took so long to develop the varieties.
The new varieties are resistant to Grey Leaf Spot, Maize Streak Viruses, and Turcicum Blight.
Research shows that the infections combined can reduce yields by 50 per cent per hectare.
A Kari research showed that farmers made losses of up to Sh28,000 per hectare due to maize streak viruses alone.
Different zones
The maturity time for the new varieties is four to five months and a hectare can yield six to eight tonnes of grain.
The maximum yield for current breeds is five tonnes or less per hectare.
The new breeds, KH500-48A, KH500-42A and KH500-49A have large cobs with 40 to 80 per cent more dry matter, making them viable for farmers keeping livestock.
The breeds are targeted at areas such as Embu, Kangundo, Kakamega, Kiambu and around Lake Victoria.
“All five series breeds are targeted at mid-altitude zones,” said Dr Leley.
According to the researcher, each maize species developed is suited for different agro-ecological zones.
He laments that due to lack of information, farmers at times plant breeds unsuited for their zones. This results in poor yields that disillusion them.
Katumani, Coast Composite or Pwani Hybrid breeds are suited to low altitude areas such as Kitui, Machakos, Kibwezi, and Mtwapa in Coast province.
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