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Three sorghum and three pearl millet varieties developed by ICRISAT in Nigeria

Three sorghum and three pearl millet varieties developed by ICRISAT in Nigeria

Media release

ICRISAT in collaboration with Nigeria's National Agricultural Research System - Lake Chad Research Institute (for pearl millet) and the Institute for Agricultural Research, Ahmadu Bello University (for sorghum) - has developed three sorghum and three pearl millet varieties, which have now been released promising better nutrition and higher yields for farmers.

The three sorghum and three pearl millet varieties are suited to the country's Sudano-Sahelian/semi-arid ecologies and are designed to be high-yielding, nutritionally enhanced, and well-adapted to local conditions.

Dr. Jacqueline Hughes, Director General, ICRISAT, commended the collaboration.

“These new releases hold promise in boosting production output while providing greater nutrition as they are well-adapted to local conditions, are high-yielding, and nutritionally enhanced.
“This collaboration exemplifies the commitment of ICRISAT and the Nigerian National Agricultural Research System through the Lake Chad Research Institute, the Institute for Agricultural Research, Ahmadu Bello University, and others, to bring innovative technologies and crops to help farmers meet the challenges of the future while improving their yields and livelihoods.
“We anticipate more breakthroughs for Nigeria and West Africa more broadly, helping to future-proof food and nutrition security in the face of climatic and other challenges affecting food production," ​ said Dr Hughes.
Dr. Jacqueline Hughes, Director General, ICRISAT
Dr. Jacqueline Hughes, Director General, ICRISAT

The dwarf sorghum varieties developed named SAMSORG 52, 53, and 54 are suitable for insurgency-endemic regions where tall crops are prohibited. ​ They additionally exhibit high grain and fodder yields, are early maturing, and are Striga tolerant with SAMSORG 52 also being a good ingredient for weaning food due to its high iron content.

The pearl millet varieties offer high yield, early medium maturity, and specific traits such as high iron and zinc, and high-tillering traits or the production of side shoots along with dense panicles to help protect against damage from birds.

 

ICRISAT Deputy Director General - Research, Dr Arvind Kumar said he was delighted to see the new varieties that would help West African farmers secure a more food-secure future and thanked all scientists and support staff for their dedication to the project.
ICRISAT Research Program Director for Accelerated Crop Improvement, Dr Sean Mayes commended the collaboration and said the new varieties demonstrated the importance of genetic advancements for improving crop productivity and nutrition - especially for regions across Africa and Asia least able to adapt to climatic changes and other environmental stressors.

 

L-R: ​ SAMSORG 52 (12KNICSV-297),SAMSORG 53 (12KNICSV-252) and SAMSORG 54 (12KNICSV-260).

The varieties have now been approved by Nigeria's National Committee on Variety Naming, Registration, and Release and are now available for promotion and commercialization through the country's seed systems.

Dr. Ramadjita Tabo, ICRISAT’s Research Program Director for West and Central Africa, said these diverse varieties marked a pivotal moment in the pursuit of enhanced food security in Nigeria's semi-arid regions.

This outcome is a result of the long-standing and productive partnership with the Nigerian National Agricultural Research System and we thank the Lake Chad Research Institute and the Institute for Agricultural Research, Ahmadu Bello University.
We look forward to building upon our successes to develop new innovative solutions that overcome nutrition, production and other hurdles facing dryland farmers" said Dr Tabo.

 

The development of these sorghum and millet varieties was a collaboration between ICRISAT, the Institute for Agricultural Research Samaru, Ahmadu Bello University, Lake Chad Research Institute, Maiduguri, and Harvest Plus in Nigeria.

L-R: CHAKTI (LCICMV5), ICMP1970115 (LCICMV6) and ICMP187093 (LCICMV7)

 

This work aligns with SDG 2,1 and 17

 

About The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) is a pioneering International Organization committed to developing and improving dryland farming and agri-food systems to address the challenges of hunger, malnutrition, poverty, and environmental degradation affecting the 2.1 billion people residing in the drylands of Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond.

ICRISAT was established under a Memorandum of Agreement between the Government of India and the CGIAR on the 28 March 1972. In accordance with the Headquarters Agreement, the Government of India has extended the status of a specified “International Organisation” to ICRISAT under section 3 of the United Nations (Privileges and Immunities) Act, 1947 of the Republic of India through Extraordinary Gazette Notification No. UI/222(66)/71, dated 28 October 1972, issued by the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India.

Our offices:

Asia: India (Headquarters - Hyderabad)

East and Southern Africa:  Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Malawi, Zimbabwe

West and Central Africa: Mali, Niger, Nigeria

For all media inquiries, please email: [email protected]

The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
Hyderabad, Telangana, India