Cruz Jean-François. 2007. Fonio. Upgrading quality and competitiveness of fonio for improved livelihoods in West Africa : First activity report. Montpellier : CIRAD, 61 p.
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Résumé : Traditional cereals constitute the staple diet of many African populations and regions, especially in the most isolated rural areas, and play an essential role in providing food for the poorest populations. They are well suited to local conditions, being reasonably resistant to drought, and help to maintain the environment by providing a covering of vegetation on ground which is ecologically fragile, and considered of little value. Among traditional cereals, fonio (Digitaria exilis), is considered as the most ancient indigenous West African cereal. Nowadays, fonio still grows in farmers' fields in a vast area extending from Senegal to Chad mainly on eroded lateritic soils. In West Africa, farmers cultivate mainly white fonio (Digitaria exilis), which is also called fundi, findi, acha or "hungry rice". The term 'hungry rice' well describes the role of this little plant in local population life. Fonio supplies to several million people food early in the growing season, when main crops are still too immature to be harvested and when other food resources are scarce. Fonio consumption varies between years and seems to be dependent on the availability of other cereals. When other cereals are not available, for example due to a failing harvest, fonio consumption is high, and thus fonio consumption could be considered as one of the coping strategies for increasing household food security. The relative stagnation of production is partly explained by a lack of research and development devoted to this product. In order to ovoid the decline of this commodity, it is important to solve the many problems after the harvest, in particular by perfecting post-harvested techniques and by improving the quality and the follow-up of sales and distribution. Today, fonio is produced by small enterprises and sold not only on local urban markets, but also to Africans emigrated in Europe and in United States. Indeed several small private enterprises, notably in Mali and Burkina, have been set up to cater for the export markets. There is strong consumer demand for fonio due to its nutritional qualities, and because it helps to satisfy the demand for a more varied cereal diet. That is the reason why a research/development project named FOMO - Upgrading quality and competitiveness of fonio for improved livelihoods in West Africa- was elaborated to achieve the following objectives. The FONIO project started formally at January 1, 2006 per three years duration.
Mots-clés Agrovoc : Digitaria exilis, valeur nutritive, utilisation, produit alimentaire, produit nouveau, technologie alimentaire, petite entreprise, projet de recherche, analyse de système, fonio
Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Afrique occidentale
Classification Agris : E21 - Agro-industrie
Q01 - Sciences et technologies alimentaires - Considérations générales
E70 - Commerce, commercialisation et distribution
Auteurs et affiliations
- Cruz Jean-François, CIRAD-PERSYST-UMR Qualisud (MLI)
Autres liens de la publication
Source : Cirad - Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/544630/)
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