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. 2019 Jul 31;14(7):e0219327.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219327. eCollection 2019.

Smallholders' coping mechanisms with wheat rust epidemics: Lessons from Ethiopia

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Smallholders' coping mechanisms with wheat rust epidemics: Lessons from Ethiopia

Moti Jaleta et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Crops are variously susceptible to biotic stresses-something expected to increase under climate change. In the case of staple crops, this potentially undermines household and national food security. We examine recent wheat rust epidemics and smallholders' coping mechanisms in Ethiopia as a case study. Wheat is a major food crop in Ethiopia widely grown by smallholders. In 2010/11 a yellow rust epidemic affected over one-third of the national wheat area. Two waves of nationally representative household level panel data collected for the preceding wheat season (2009/10) and three years after (2013/14) the occurrence of the epidemic allow us to analyze the different coping mechanisms farmers used in response. Apart from using fungicides as ex-post coping mechanism, increasing wheat area under yellow rust resistant varieties, increasing diversity of wheat varieties grown, or a combination of these strategies were the main ex-ante coping mechanisms farmers had taken in reducing the potential effects of rust re-occurrence. Large-scale dis-adoption of highly susceptible varieties and replacement with new, rust resistant varieties was observed subsequent to the 2010/11 epidemic. Multinomial logistic regression models were used to identify the key factors associated with smallholder ex-ante coping strategies. Household characteristics, level of specialization in wheat and access to improved wheat seed were the major factors that explained observed choices. There was 29-41% yield advantage in increasing wheat area to the new, resistant varieties even under normal seasons with minimum rust occurrence in the field. Continuous varietal development in responding to emerging new rust races and supporting the deployment of newly released resistant varieties could help smallholders in dealing with rust challenges and maintaining improved yields in the rust-prone environments of Ethiopia. Given the global importance of both wheat and yellow rust and climate change dynamics study findings have relevance to other regions.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Yellow rust occurrence by agro-ecological zone (AEZ) in 2010/11 production season, Ethiopia (self-reported by sample farmers, 2013/14 survey).
Fig 2
Fig 2. Distribution of farmers reporting yellow rust on-farm (blue dots, scaled by % positive yellow rust reports per kebele) in relation to the approximate area covered by the yellow rust epidemic in 2010 (based on disease survey data).
Fig 3
Fig 3. Cumulative distribution of wheat productivity (kg/ha, self-reported) for different wheat rust coping mechanisms, Ethiopia (2013/14 survey).

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