DEUS NGOWI in Arusha
FOOD
insecurity is significantly increasing in East Africa partly due to
rapid population growth, which is projected at 150 per cent by 2050.
According
to East Africa Regional Impact Centre Technical Advisor Charles
Bonaventure, over 40 per cent of children in the region are
malnourished.
“Majority
of these children are orphaned and live in difficult circumstances…the
large part of rural population lives in poverty, relying on a
subsistence lifestyle,” he said.
The
expert noted that some of the reasons for the situation include high
rate of post-harvest losses, underdeveloped, weak markets and lack of
supportive infrastructure for farmers to improve value of their produce.
He
said that majority farmers and herdsmen in the region do not have
adequate access to agricultural services, continuing education or access
to formal training.
Another
reason, he said, was increased pressure, forcing families to cultivate
small land that results into land degradation and loss of sustainability
in food production.
The
East African region is as well affected by drought, especially in arid
pastoralist areas while there is deforestation, flooding, climate change
and diseases.
He
sighted pests such as Fall Armyworm attacking more than 80 host
species, Tuta absoluta mainly tomatoes and the Southern Armyworm (SAW),
now in West and Central Africa and weeds such as parthenium, known as
‘Gugu Karoti’.
The
SAW is native to the American tropics, occurring widely in Central and
South America and the Caribbean that has entered East African countries
and affecting a host of crops.
“These species have a very broad host range and include important vegetable, fruit, field and ornamental crops.
Among
the vegetables injured are beet, cabbage, carrot, collard, cowpea,
eggplant, okra, pepper, potato, sweet potato, tomato, and watermelon.
“Other
crops damaged include cassava, avocado, citrus, peanut, sunflower,
velvet bean, tobacco and various flowers. Many weeds are consumed, but
mchicha, amaranthus spp are especially favoured,” he said.
Mr
Bonaventure said that there are numerous reports of armyworm
infestations beginning with pigweed and pokeweed, with adjacent crops
damaged only after the more favoured weeds are consumed.
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