Abstract

Societal Impact StatementEnset is a staple food for over 20 million people via its starch‐rich corm and pseudostem, yet it is virtually unknown outside a narrow zone of cultivation in southern Ethiopia. Due to acculturation and urbanization coupled with climate change, emerging pests and the introduction of new crops, the extensive indigenous knowledge associated with this crop is in danger of being lost, imperilling the future food security and prosperity of millions of Ethiopians. Here, we synthesize the current state of enset ethnobotanical research, identifying key gaps and challenges, and provide a framework for further enset research to safeguard this important, but neglected, tropical crop. Summary Enset (Ensete ventricosum (Welw.) Cheesman) is the major starch staple of the Ethiopian Highlands, where its unique attributes enhance the food security of approximately 20 million people and have earned it the title “The Tree Against Hunger”. Yet enset‐based agriculture is virtually unknown outside of its narrow zone of cultivation, despite growing wild across much of East and Southern Africa. Here, we review historical production data to show that the area of land under enset production in Ethiopia has reportedly increased 46% in two decades, whilst yield increased 12‐fold over the same period, making enset the second most produced crop species in Ethiopia—though we critically evaluate potential issues with these data. Furthermore, we address a major challenge in the development and wider cultivation of enset, by reviewing and synthesizing the complex and fragmented agronomic and ethnobotanic knowledge associated with this species; including farming systems, processing methods, products, medicinal uses and cultural importance. Finally, we provide a framework to improve the quality, consistency and comparability of data collected across culturally diverse enset‐based agricultural systems to enhanced sustainable use of this neglected starch staple. In conclusion, we discuss the challenges and opportunities for enset cultivation beyond its restricted distribution, and the regional food security potential it could afford smallholders elsewhere in Southern and East Africa.

Highlights

  • Ethiopia is ranked 104th of 119 countries in the most recent Global Hunger Index (von Grebmer et al, 2017), with 28.8% of the population undernourished from 2014–16

  • Ethiopia's agricultural history is characterized by the domestication of cultigens including coffee (Coffea arabica L.), tef (Eragrostis tef (Zuccagni) Trotter), khat (Catha edulis Forsk), noog (Guizotia abyssinica (L.f.) Cass.), finger millet (Eleusine coracana L.) and enset (Ensete ventricosum (Welw.) Cheesman) (Harlan, 1969, 1971; Khoury et al, 2016)

  • Due to the complexity of enset propagation, management, harvesting, and processing, enset agricultural practice is currently inseparable from the ethnobotanical knowledge housed by numerous Ethiopian ethnic groups for which enset is a starch staple

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Summary

Introduction

Ethiopia is ranked 104th of 119 countries in the most recent Global Hunger Index (von Grebmer et al, 2017), with 28.8% of the population undernourished from 2014–16. An empirical evaluation of hectares in production, the number of harvested plants and overall yield is key to monitoring enset's role in providing food security.

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