Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to review the current status of wheat production, farming systems, production constraints and wheat demand-supply chain analysis; the role of international and national breeding programs and their approaches in wheat genetic improvement including targeting mega environments, shuttle breeding, doubled haploids, marker-assisted selection and key location phenotyping; and future prospects and opportunities of wheat production in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA).Design/methodology/approachRelevant literature works have been used and cited accordingly.FindingsThough traditionally wheat was not the leading staple crop in SSA, it is becoming an important food crop because of rapid population growth associated with increased urbanization and change in food preference for easy and fast food such as bread, biscuits, pasta, noodles and porridge. In 2013, total wheat consumption in SSA reached 25 million tons with import accounting for 17.5 million tons at a price of USD6 billion, while during the same period the region produces only 7.3 million tons on a total area of 2.9 million hectares. The low productivity (2t/ha) in the region is principally because of abiotic (drought and heat) and biotic (yellow rust, stem rust, septoria and fusarium) stresses which are increasing in intensity and frequency associated with climate change. Furthermore, increased cost of production, growing populations, increased rural-urban migration, low public and private investments, weak extension systems and policies, and low adoption rates of new technologies remain to be major challenges for wheat production in SSA. Wheat breeding in SSA is dominantly carried out by National Agricultural Research Systems, in partnership with the international research centers [International center for improvement of maize and wheat (CIMMYT) and International center for agricultural research in the dry areas (ICARDA)], to develop high yielding and widely adapted wheat genotypes with increased water-use efficiency, heat tolerance and resistance to major diseases and pests. Most of the cultivars grown in SSA are originated from the international research centers, CIMMYT and ICARDA.Practical implicationsThis paper will help to promote available wheat technologies in SSA by creating awareness to wheat scientists, extension agents and policymakers.Originality/valueThis manuscript is an original review paper which has not been published in this form elsewhere.

Highlights

  • Africa produces more than 25 million tons of wheat on 10 million hectares (Mha)

  • Bread wheat, which accounts for 95 per cent of the wheat production at the global level, is the dominant wheat type produced in Sub-Sahara Africa (SSA)

  • Status of wheat production in Sub-Saharan Africa 2.1 Major wheat growing environments Though there are a high degree of environmental variations in each country and across the region, based on moisture availability, cropping systems and temperature regimes, the wheat production area in SSA can be divided into two major mega-environments: rain-fed and irrigated

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Summary

Paper type General review

International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management Vol 11 No 5, 2018 pp. ©Wuletaw Tadesse, Zewdie Bishaw and Solomon Assefa. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode. This paper forms part of a special section “Climate change and arid land agriculture: impact and adaptive”, guest edited by Mirza Barjees Baig, Gary S.

Introduction
DR Congo
Seed multiplication
List of dominant historical cultivars
Jawahir Salah
CIMMYT ICARDA
Findings
Further reading
Full Text
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