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Dive into the research topics where Jupiter Ndjeunga is active.

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Featured researches published by Jupiter Ndjeunga.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006

Diversity of wild and cultivated pearl millet accessions (Pennisetum glaucum [L.] R. Br.) in Niger assessed by microsatellite markers

Cédric Mariac; Viviane Luong; Issoufou Kapran; Aïssata Mamadou; Fabrice Sagnard; Monique Deu; Jacques Chantereau; Bruno Gérard; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Gilles Bezançon; Jean Louis Pham; Yves Vigouroux

Genetic diversity of crop species in sub-Sahelian Africa is still poorly documented. Among such crops, pearl millet is one of the most important staple species. In Niger, pearl millet covers more than 65% of the total cultivated area. Analyzing pearl millet genetic diversity, its origin and its dynamics is important for in situ and ex situ germplasm conservation and to increase knowledge useful for breeding programs. We developed new genetic markers and a high-throughput technique for the genetic analysis of pearl millet. Using 25 microsatellite markers, we analyzed genetic diversity in 46 wild and 421 cultivated accessions of pearl millet in Niger. We showed a significantly lower number of alleles and lower gene diversity in cultivated pearl millet accessions than in wild accessions. This result contrasts with a previous study using iso-enzyme markers showing similar genetic diversity between cultivated and wild pearl millet populations. We found a strong differentiation between the cultivated and wild groups in Niger. Analyses of introgressions between cultivated and wild accessions showed modest but statistically supported evidence of introgressions. Wild accessions in the central region of Niger showed introgressions of cultivated alleles. Accessions of cultivated pearl millet showed introgressions of wild alleles in the western, central, and eastern parts of Niger.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2011

Dry land tree management for improved household livelihoods: Farmer managed natural regeneration in Niger

Eric Haglund; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Laura Snook; Dov Pasternak

Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR), a set of practices farmers use to foster the growth of indigenous trees on agricultural land, has drawn substantial attention as a contributing factor to a trend of increasing vegetation greenness in the Republic of Niger. This paper identifies drivers of FMNR adoption and assesses its impacts on rural households in the Region of Maradi, Niger, an area covering 42,000 square kilometers. The results show that 26% of households practice a form of FMNR involving both pruning and protecting woody vegetation. Adoption is strongly linked to soil type, market access, and the education level of the head of household. FMNR raises household income and increases crop diversity, household migration rates, and the density and diversity of trees on farmland. It is estimated that FMNR raises the annual gross income of the region by between 17 and 21 million USD and has contributed an additional 900,000 to 1,000,000 trees to the local environment. These findings support the value of continued promotion of FMNR as an inexpensive means of enhancing rural livelihoods and an attractive alternative to reforestation efforts relying on tree planting.


Archive | 2007

Improving cereal productivity and farmers' income using a strategic application of fertilizers in West Africa

Ramadjita Tabo; André Bationo; Bruno Gérard; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Daniel Marchal; Bassirou Amadou; Mallam Garba Annou; Diakala Sogodogo; Jean-Baptiste Sibiry Taonda; O. Hassane; Maimouna K. Diallo; Saidou Koala

In the past two years, ICRISAT, in collaboration with other International Agricultural Research Centres, National Agricultural Research and Extension Systems, has been evaluating and promoting point or hill application of fertilizer along with “Warrantage” in three West African countries, namely, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. The hill application of fertilizers consists of applying small doses of fertilizer in the planting hills of millet and sorghum. The combination of strategic hill application of fertilizer with complementary institutional and market linkages, through an inventory credit system (known as “Warrantage”) offers a good opportunity to improve crop productivity and farmers’ incomes. Results from the two year on-farm trials showed that, on average, in all the three countries, grain yields of millet and sorghum were greater by 44 to 120% while incomes of farmers increased by 52 to 134% when using hill application of fertilizer than with the earlier recommended fertilizer broadcasting methods and farmers’ practice. Substantial net profits were obtained by farmers using “Warrantage”. Farmers’ access to credit and inputs was improved substantially through the “Warrantage” system. The technology has reached up to 12650 farm households in the three countries and efforts are in progress to further scale-up and out the technology to wider geographical areas.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Selection for Earlier Flowering Crop Associated with Climatic Variations in the Sahel

Yves Vigouroux; Cédric Mariac; Stéphane De Mita; Jean Louis Pham; Bruno Gérard; Issoufou Kapran; Fabrice Sagnard; Monique Deu; Jacques Chantereau; Abdou Ali; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Viviane Luong; Anne-Céline Thuillet; Abdoul-Aziz Saïdou; Gilles Bezançon

Climate changes will have an impact on food production and will require costly adaptive responses. Adapting to a changing environment will be particularly challenging in sub-Saharan Africa where climate change is expected to have a major impact. However, one important phenomenon that is often overlooked and is poorly documented is the ability of agro-systems to rapidly adapt to environmental variations. Such an adaptation could proceed by the adoption of new varieties or by the adaptation of varieties to a changing environment. In this study, we analyzed these two processes in one of the driest agro-ecosystems in Africa, the Sahel. We performed a detailed study in Niger where pearl millet is the main crop and covers 65% of the cultivated area. To assess how the agro-system is responding to recent recurrent drought, we analyzed samples of pearl millet landraces collected in the same villages in 1976 and 2003 throughout the entire cultivated area of Niger. We studied phenological and morphological differences in the 1976 and 2003 collections by comparing them over three cropping seasons in a common garden experiment. We found no major changes in the main cultivated varieties or in their genetic diversity. However, we observed a significant shift in adaptive traits. Compared to the 1976 samples, samples collected in 2003 displayed a shorter lifecycle, and a reduction in plant and spike size. We also found that an early flowering allele at the PHYC locus increased in frequency between 1976 and 2003. The increase exceeded the effect of drift and sampling, suggesting a direct effect of selection for earliness on this gene. We conclude that recurrent drought can lead to selection for earlier flowering in a major Sahelian crop. Surprisingly, these results suggest that diffusion of crop varieties is not the main driver of short term adaptation to climatic variation.


Archive | 2011

Fertilizer Microdosing and “Warrantage” or Inventory Credit System to Improve Food Security and Farmers’ Income in West Africa

Ramadjita Tabo; André Bationo; Bassirou Amadou; D Marchal; F Lompo; M. Gandah; O. Hassane; M.K. Diallo; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Dougbedji Fatondji; Bruno Gérard; D Sogodogo; Jbs Taonda; K Sako; S Boubacar; A Abdou; Saidou Koala

The fertilizer microdosing technology deals with the application of small quantities of fertilizers in the planting hole, thereby increasing fertilizer use efficiency and yields while minimizing input costs. In drought years, microdosing also performs well, because larger root systems are more efficient at finding water, and it hastens crop maturity, avoiding late-season drought. Recent research found that solving the soil fertility problem unleashes the yield potential of improved millet varieties, generating an additional grain yield of nearly the same quantity. Recognizing that liquidity constraints often prevent farmers from intensifying their production system, the warrantage or inventory credit system helps to remove barriers to the adoption of soil fertility restoration. Using a participatory approach through a network of partners from the National Agricultural Research and Extension Systems (NARES), non-governmental organizations (NGOs), farmers and farmer groups and other international agricultural research centres, the microdosing technology and the warrantage system have been demonstrated and promoted in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger during the past few years with encouraging results. Sorghum and millet yields increased by up to 120%, and farmers’ incomes went up by 130% when microdosing was combined with the warrantage system. This chapter highlights the outstanding past results and the ongoing efforts to further scale up the technology using Farmer field schools (FFS) and demonstrations, capacity and institutional strengthening, private sector linkages and crop diversification amongst other approaches.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2008

Niger-wide assessment of in situ sorghum genetic diversity with microsatellite markers

Monique Deu; Fabrice Sagnard; Jacques Chantereau; Caroline Calatayud; Damien Herault; Cédric Mariac; Jean Louis Pham; Yves Vigouroux; Issoufou Kapran; Pierre C. Sibiry Traoré; Aïssata Mamadou; Bruno Gérard; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Gilles Bezançon


Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution | 2009

Changes in the diversity and geographic distribution of cultivated millet (Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br.) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) varieties in Niger between 1976 and 2003

Gilles Bezançon; Jean Louis Pham; Monique Deu; Yves Vigouroux; Fabrice Sagnard; Cédric Mariac; Issoufou Kapran; Aïssata Mamadou; Bruno Gérard; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Jacques Chantereau


Agricultural Economics | 2004

Toward understanding household preference for consumption characteristics of millet varieties: a case study from western Niger

Jupiter Ndjeunga; Carl H. Nelson


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2010

Spatio-temporal dynamics of genetic diversity in Sorghum bicolor in Niger

Monique Deu; Fabrice Sagnard; Jacques Chantereau; Caroline Calatayud; Yves Vigouroux; Jean Louis Pham; Cédric Mariac; Issoufou Kapran; Aïssata Mamadou; Bruno Gérard; Jupiter Ndjeunga; Gilles Bezançon


Irrigation and Drainage | 2011

The African market garden: The development of a low‐pressure drip irrigation system for smallholders in the sudano sahel

Lennart Woltering; Dov Pasternak; Jupiter Ndjeunga

Collaboration


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Bruno Gérard

International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center

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Cédric Mariac

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Gilles Bezançon

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Jean Louis Pham

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Yves Vigouroux

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Issoufou Kapran

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Monique Deu

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Fabrice Sagnard

International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

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Jacques Chantereau

International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

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Aïssata Mamadou

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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