Michael Blümmel
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Blümmel.
Experimental Agriculture | 2011
Olaf Erenstein; Arindam Samaddar; Nils Teufel; Michael Blümmel
SUMMARY Cereal residues are an important feed source for ruminants in smallholder crop-livestock systems in the (sub)tropics. In many areas of India maize is a relatively new cash crop where farmers and development agents alike generally perceive maize stover to have limited utility, in contrast with the intensive feeding of other cereal residues in India and the intensive use of maize stover in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. A comparative assessment of maize stover quality (based on a brief review and a feeding trial) indeed confirms its potential as a ruminant feed according to its relative nutritive value. The paper then explores the apparent paradox through a scoping study of maize stover use (based on village surveys) in three contrasting maize-growing districts in India – including both traditional and non-traditional maize producers. The limited maize stover use appears to alleviate seasonal shortages, with tradition and technology helping explain the preferential use of other cereal residues. The paper thereby provides further impetus to India’s apparent food-feed paradigm – whereby farmers’ staple food preferences coincide with crop residue feed preferences. The paper argues the case for investing in maize stover R&D in India and thus reigniting earlier feed research in general. Indeed, maize stover use is a relatively neglected area by India’s agricultural R&D and merits more attention so as to exploit its potential contribution and alleviate eventual tradeoffs.
Food Chain | 2015
Iheanacho Okike; A. Samireddypalle; Lawrence Kaptoge; Claude M. Fauquet; Joseph Atehnkeng; Ranajit Bandyopadhyay; Peter Kulakow; Alan J. Duncan; Tunrayo Alabi; Michael Blümmel
Nigeria, the world’s largest producer of cassava, harvests 54 million metric tonnes (Mt) of cassava tubers annually. More than 95 per cent of its uses require peeling which generates up to 14 Mt of waste annually; mostly due to challenges related to drying. Sun drying is practically impossible during the wet season and it takes 2–3 days in the dry season to reduce the moisture content of fresh peels from about 60 per cent to 20 per cent or less – a marketable state. This is a report on a multi-centre and multi-disciplinary research work (in its early stages) to better utilize the waste. Ongoing work is showing great potential and has so far dramatically reduced cassava peels moisture content to 12–15 per cent within six sunshine hours using only equipment in current use by small-scale processors and households. The considerably shorter processing ensures high-quality products, low in aflatoxins contamination. Also, in a small sample experiment, when compared to sorghum grains currently being used for the ...
Tropical Grasslands - Forrajes Tropicales | 2015
C. Aruna; M. Swarnalatha; P. Praveen Kumar; V. Devender; M. Suguna; Michael Blümmel; J.V. Patil
Improving yield and quality of fodder from forage sorghum is important, especially in the semi-arid tropics, where sorghum is a major source of fodder. The aim of this work was to understand the genetic basis of fodder yield and quality traits, and character associations, and to estimate combining ability of the parents. The experiment was carried out during 2 successive rainy seasons using 10 parents crossed in a half-diallel design. Significant differences among the genotypes for fodder yield, quality and cell wall constituents were observed. Important quality traits, crude protein and digestibility (IVOMD), were not correlated with fodder yield, indicating the potential to improve yield and quality simultaneously in forage sorghum. General combining ability and specific combining ability variances showed that, for almost all characters, both additive and non-additive gene effects were important, with a predominance of non-additive effects. Parental lines SEVS4, HC308 and UPMC503 were good general combiners for yield and quality. The brown midrib lines, EC582508 and EC582510, were good general combiners for low lignin and high IVOMD. Strategies for improving forage sorghum to suit animal and biofuel industries are discussed. Keywords: Digestibility, crude protein, ADL, diallel analysis, gene effects. DOI: 10.17138/TGFT(3)49-58
Livestock Science | 2011
Shirley A. Tarawali; Mario Herrero; K Descheemaeker; Elaine E. Grings; Michael Blümmel
Field Crops Research | 2013
P.H. Zaidi; M.T. Vinayan; Michael Blümmel
Field Crops Research | 2013
M.T. Vinayan; R. Babu; T. Jyothsna; P.H. Zaidi; Michael Blümmel
Archive | 2014
Ben A. Lukuyu; I. Okike; Alan J. Duncan; Malcolm Beveridge; Michael Blümmel
Archive | 2010
John A. Dixon; Xiaoyun Li; Siwa Msangi; Tilahun Amede; Deborah A. Bossio; H. Ceballos; B. Ospina; Reinhardt H. Howeler; Belum V. S. Reddy; R.C. Abaidoo; J. Timsina; Cc Crissman; Victor Mares; Roberto Quiroz; C.U. Leon-Velarde; Mario Herrero; Michael Blümmel; Federico J. Holmann; Michael Peters; Douglas White; M. Qadir; J. Szonyi
Revue d'élevage et de médecine vétérinaire des pays tropicaux | 2014
Augustine A. Ayantunde; Michael Blümmel; Elaine E. Grings; Alan J. Duncan
Archive | 2010
Michael Blümmel; Shirley A. Tarawali; Nils Teufel; Iain A. Wright
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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