Mozambique Early Generation Seed Study

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Mozambique Early Generation Seed Study
Abstract
Seed systems in Mozambique There are three identified dominant seed systems in Mozambique, namely informal seed system (mainly farmer-saved seed), the intermediary (mainly administered by the NGOs and communitybased organizations) and the formal seed system that includes public sector and private sector (local and international seed companies). The farmer-saved and intermediary systems account for the bulk of seed volume transacted across the country (90%) focusing mainly on the local varieties. Although the adoption rate is relatively high for cassava, there is no vegetative seed certification system in place. There is no official sesame variety, despite an over three-fold increase in the last 12 years in terms of the total area allocated to this crop. Early generation seed systems by crop Six crops selected for the Mozambique EGS case study were maize (hybrid and OPV), rice, cowpea, groundnut, soybean and cassava
Institution
Scaling Seeds and Technologies Partnership in collaboration with The Rutgers University
Date
2016
Language
English
Accessed
04/11/2021, 22:31
Citation
USAID. (2016). Mozambique Early Generation Seed Study. Scaling Seeds and Technologies Partnership in collaboration with The Rutgers University. https://agrilinks.org/sites/default/files/resource/files/mozambique_early_generation_seed_report.pdf
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Language / Linguagem