Participatory approach of preferred traits, production constraints and mitigation strategies: implications for soybean breeding in Guinea Savannah zone of Ghana
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Heliyon
Abstract
Soybean production is concentrated in the Guinea Savannah agro-ecological zone of Ghana. However, its cultivation is plagued with a number of constraints leading to low yields. A participatory approach was, therefore,
used to identify farmers' and processors' preferred soybean traits and production constraints, climate change
effects and strategies employed for mitigating these effects in three districts within the soybean growing areas in
Northern Ghana. The study revealed that 72.0 % and 68.8 % of farmers in the Tolon and Savelugu districts,
respectively, used improved soybean seeds for planting their fields. Over 13.0 % of farmers indicated late maturity
as the most important constraint, followed by manual threshing difficulty and terminal drought which results in
low grain yield and poor quality. About 70.0 % of farmers opined that climate change effects are causing obvious
shifts in the rainfall pattern. Majority of the farmers (94.6 %) indicated that the onset of peak rainfall has changed
in the past decade. Almost 44.0% of farmers also indicated that severe drought has affected pods filling in the
past. A third (33.3%) of farmers indicated that drought usually sets in at pod initiation. The farmers enumerated
some of the effects of early cessation of the rainfall in soybean production as drying up of immature and green
seed (28.3%), low grain yield (27.1%) and poor seed quality (22.1%). Some of the mitigation strategies employed
by the farmers include early planting (40.0%) and mulching (25.0%) to retain soil moisture for enhanced growth
of crops. The order of farmers’ preferences new soybean varieties were shattering resistance (16.0%), high grain
yield (14.0%), large seeds size (13.1%), and early maturity (11.8%), whereas processors preferred varieties with
large seed size (30.6%), high protein content (28.7%), pest resistance (15.9%) and short cooking duration
(12.7%). Both the farmers and processors indicated their willingness to pay more for seeds with the desired traits.
These findings will aid soybean breeders in developing new varieties that possess desired traits preferred by both
farmers and processors for increased soybean cultivation and utilization.
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Research Article
