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WARDA
News Release
Cotonou,
Benin
27 April 2006
Bridging the Biotech Divide
WARDA Strengthens Capacity of National Partners in Africa
Rice breeders and pathologists of national
agricultural research programs in sub-Saharan Africa will now have access to
state-of-the-art molecular biology tools thanks to a comprehensive capacity
building program offered by the Africa Rice Center (WARDA) in response to
strong demand from its member countries.
A major thrust of this program is to develop a new breed of national
scientific staff trained in the application of molecular marker-assisted
selection techniques as part of a project funded by
USAID-West Africa Regional Program (WARP).
The national programs of four West African countries—Burkina Faso, Guinea,
Mali, and The Gambia—are participating in this project, which seeks to
address the intractable problem of rice yellow mottle virus (RYMV). The
potential benefits of the project are expected to go far beyond the four
project countries and reach all the African countries that grow rice.
RYMV is a scourge of lowland and irrigated rice and is unique to Africa,
where it can sometimes lead to total crop failure, contributing to famine in
areas where rice is an important food staple.
The WARDA-USAID RYMV project is helping research staff from the national
programs of the four project countries to use marker-assisted selection
techniques to speed up the process of developing RYMV-resistant rice
varieties.
An important component of the project is to help set up in each of the four
countries a small functional biotechnology laboratory where trained national
staff will be able to transfer RYMV-resistant genes to elite rice varieties.
“It is important to note that the legacy of this 3-year project will be the
availability of these laboratories furnished with basic equipment necessary
to apply molecular biology techniques and trained national staff who can
apply these techniques across many different crops,” explained Dr
Marie-Noelle Ndjiondjop, WARDA Molecular Biologist, who is heading this
project.
The first of the series of training programs planned for this project is
under way in Cotonou, Benin, 18-28 April 2006, in which eight researchers
are taking part. The 2-week intensive hands-on course includes all steps
from DNA extraction to data analyses for genetic diversity studies, linkage
mapping, QTL analysis, and marker assisted selection.
“At the end of the training period, each participant is expected to
understand how to collect, analyze, interpret, and present data from a wide
rage of molecular markers, with emphasis on RAPD, ISSR, AFLP, and
microsatellites,” said Dr Ndjiondjop.
In addition to this training program, the project is supporting several
doctoral students and post-doctoral fellows from sub-Saharan Africa to
undertake research studies in biotechnology.
“In view of the predominant role of the private sector in biotechnology and
the lack of emphasis on poor people’s crops, this WARDA-USAID partnership
which is enabling public sector researchers, especially our national
partners, to take advantage of the biotechnological revolution to address
problems faced by poor farmers in sub-Saharan Africa is very significant,”
stated
WARDA Director General Dr Kanayo F. Nwanze.
About the Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
Africa
Rice Center (WARDA) is an autonomous intergovernmental research
association of African member states. WARDA is also one of the 15
international agricultural research Centers supported by the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
WARDA’s mission is to contribute to poverty alleviation and food
security in Africa, through research, development and partnership
activities aimed at increasing the productivity and profitability of the
rice sector in ways that ensure the sustainability of the farming
environment.
WARDA hosts the African
Rice Initiative (ARI), the Regional
Rice Research and Development Network for West and Central Africa
(ROCARIZ),
and the Inland
Valley Consortium (IVC). It also supports the Coordination Unit of
the Eastern and Central African Rice Research Network (ECARRN), based
in Tanzania.
Since January 2005, WARDA has been working out of the
International Institute of Tropical Agriculture
(IITA)-Benin station in Cotonou, having relocated from its headquarters in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire, because of the Ivoirian crisis. WARDA has regional research stations near St Louis, Senegal and at IITA in Ibadan, Nigeria.
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