Ram Rana
CGIAR
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ram Rana.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
D. I. Jarvis; A. H. D. Brown; Pham Hung Cuong; Luis Collado-Panduro; Luis Latournerie-Moreno; Sanjaya Gyawali; Tesema Tanto; Mahamadou Sawadogo; Istvan Mar; Mohammed Sadiki; Nguyen Thi Ngoc Hue; Luis Manuel Arias-Reyes; Didier Balma; Jwala Bajracharya; Fernando Castillo; Deepak Rijal; Loubna Belqadi; Ram Rana; Seddik Saidi; Jeremy Ouedraogo; Roger Zangre; Keltoum Rhrib; José Luis Chávez; Daniel J. Schoen; Bhuwon Sthapit; Paola De Santis; Carlo Fadda; Toby Hodgkin
Varietal data from 27 crop species from five continents were drawn together to determine overall trends in crop varietal diversity on farm. Measurements of richness, evenness, and divergence showed that considerable crop genetic diversity continues to be maintained on farm, in the form of traditional crop varieties. Major staples had higher richness and evenness than nonstaples. Variety richness for clonal species was much higher than that of other breeding systems. A close linear relationship between traditional variety richness and evenness (both transformed), empirically derived from data spanning a wide range of crops and countries, was found both at household and community levels. Fitting a neutral “function” to traditional variety diversity relationships, comparable to a species abundance distribution of “neutral ecology,” provided a benchmark to assess the standing diversity on farm. In some cases, high dominance occurred, with much of the variety richness held at low frequencies. This suggested that diversity may be maintained as an insurance to meet future environmental changes or social and economic needs. In other cases, a more even frequency distribution of varieties was found, possibly implying that farmers are selecting varieties to service a diversity of current needs and purposes. Divergence estimates, measured as the proportion of community evenness displayed among farmers, underscore the importance of a large number of small farms adopting distinctly diverse varietal strategies as a major force that maintains crop genetic diversity on farm.
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability | 2008
B. R. Sthapit; Ram Rana; Pablo Eyzaguirre; D. I. Jarvis
Genetic resources for food and agriculture are the biological basis of world food and nutrition security; and they directly or indirectly support the livelihoods of over 2.5 billion people. Genetic diversity gives a species or a population the ability to adapt to changing environments. For resource-poor farmers, adaptive animal breeds, crop varieties and cultivars adapted to particular micro-niches, stresses or uses are the main resources available to maintain or increase production and provide a secure livelihood. The economic value of genetic diversity for productivity and yield traits is discussed in the literature. However, it is difficult to value many other aspects of agricultural biodiversity as these have both direct and indirect values in terms of qualitative traits such as food, nutrition and environmental uses that include adaptation to low input conditions, co-adaptive complexes, yield stability and the consequent reduction of risk, specific niche adaptation, and in meeting socio-cultural needs. Together, the direct and indirect values of genetic resources for resource-poor farmers are expressed in a range of options in the form of the crop varieties and species they use for managing changing environments. The value of genetic diversity to resource-poor farmers is seldom captured by markets or addressed by the international research agenda. This paper presents lessons learned from our work over 5–10 years in the Asia and Pacific Ocean (APO) region on participatory crop improvement, home gardens and on-farm management of agricultural biodiversity. The lessons illustrate how farmers adapt genetic resources to suit local environmental conditions. The paper focuses on the value of genetic diversity of selected crop species to meet peoples food and other needs. Genetic diversity valued by resource-poor farmers is often maintained, selected and exchanged by local social seed networks. Identification of such genetic resources and their custodians is important if international agricultural research is to contribute to the reduction of poverty. The paper highlights some good practices from case studies that illustrate how such genetic resources could be exploited by informal research and development strategies or participatory plant breeding or for marketing value-added products.
Agriculture and Human Values | 2007
Ram Rana; Chris Garforth; Bhuwon Sthapit; D. I. Jarvis
Archive | 2004
P Chaudhary; D Gauchan; Ram Rana; Bhuwon Sthapit; D. I. Jarvis
Archive | 2007
Tahir Rehman; Chris Garforth; K McKemey; C.M. Yates; Ram Rana
Plant Genetic Resources | 2009
Ram Rana; Chris Garforth; Bhuwon Sthapit
15th Congress, Campinas SP, Brazil, August 14-19, 2005 | 2005
Alison Bailey; Chris Garforth; Brian Angell; Tricia Scott; Jason Beedell; Sam Beechener; Ram Rana
Plant Genetic Resources Newsletter = Bulletin de Ressources Phytogénétiques = Noticiario de Recursos Fitogenéticos | 2007
Ram Rana; Chris Garforth; Bhuwon Sthapit; Anil Subedi; Pashupati Chaudhary; D. I. Jarvis
Agrobiodiversity conservation on-farm: Nepal's contribution to a scientific basis for national policy recommendations. Proceedings of a workshop, Kathmandu, Nepal, 10 February 2002 | 2003
Anil Subedi; Pashupati Chaudhary; B. K. Baniya; Ram Rana; R. K. Tiwari; Deepak Rijal; D. I. Jarvis; B. R. Sthapit; Devendra Gauchan
Advances in Ecological Research | 2015
Mathieu Thomas; Nicolas Verzelen; Pierre Barbillon; Oliver T. Coomes; Sophie Caillon; Doyle McKey; Marianne Elias; Eric Garine; Christine Raimond; Edmond Dounias; D. I. Jarvis; Jean Wencélius; Christian Leclerc; Vanesse Labeyrie; Pham Hung Cuong; Nguyen Thi Ngoc Hue; B. R. Sthapit; Ram Rana; Adeline Barnaud; Chloé Violon; Luis Manuel Arias Reyes; Luis Latournerie Moreno; Paola De Santis; François Massol