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The Central Asia and the
Caucasus Regional Program (CACRP) works in partnership with NARS of
Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan in Central
Asia, and Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia in the Caucasus. The Program
includes activities relating to germplasm improvement, plant genetic
resources, soil and water management, integrated feed and livestock
production, and strengthening capacity building of NARS.
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were supplied to the national
programs during the year.
A collection mission was launched in Turkmenistan
in June in collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture, the Australian
Center for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) and Vavilov Institute
(VIR) scientists. This helped increase the number of accessions so far
collected from the CAC region to around 1500. The collected germplasm
is being kept by the host country and conserved "in-trust"
in ICARDA's genebank, providing safety duplication. Support in the form
of technical backstopping and equipment was provided for the renovation
of the genebank in Uzbekistan jointly by ICARDA, IPGRI and USDA, and
for the establishment of genetic resources centers in Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan
and Azerbaijan.
To improve milk productivity of local sheep
breed in Uzbekistan, 600 ewes were artificially inseminated with frozen
semen provided by the University of Wisconsin, USA. A specialist in
artificial insemination from Indonesia assisted the farmers and Uzbek
scientists. Several livestock production practices, such as early weaning,
early lambing, market oriented lamb fattening and milking, have been
tested and some of them have already shown considerable economic promise
in Central Asian countries.
An agreement for research collaboration was
signed between ICARDA and the Republic of Tajikistan.
Workshops
and coordination meetings
In January, CACRP hosted a meeting for the Consortium on Afghanistan,
initiated with support from the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID). Seventy-four representatives from international
and non-governmental organizations, United Nations agencies and donor
agencies came together to form the "Future Harvest Consortium to
Rebuild Agriculture in Afghanistan." Ten of the sixteen Future
Harvest Centers of the CGIAR are now members of the Consortium. The
immediate aim was to develop a work plan for a 12-month project on seed
systems, and lay a framework for longer-term activities in seeds and
crop improvement; soil and water management; livestock, feed, and rangeland
improvement; and horticulture.
A special Symposium on Central Asia was organized
during the Annual Meeting of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science
Society of America and Soil Science Society of America in Indianapolis
on 10-14 November in order to provide special focus on agricultural
development in the region. ICARDA and the German Center for Development
Research (ZEF) jointly cosponsored the session and supported participation
of scientists from the region.
The heads of NARS from Uzbekistan, Tajikistan
and Turkmenistan participated in the "Interregional Workshop for
the Development of Partnership on Cotton Research in Central Asia, South
Asia and WANA Regions," organized jointly by AARINENA, APAARI,
CAC-Forum and ICARDA Office in Tehran. An Interregional Network for
research collaboration on sustainable cotton production systems was
established. The organizers as well as AERO, Iran agreed to support
this network.
Senior seed program managers and policy makers
from six countries of the region (Azerbaijan, Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan) participated in the "Regional
Workshop on Harmonization of Seed Regulations for Central Asia and West
Asia," organized by the Seed Unit of ICARDA in cooperation with
the SPII, Iran. Harmonization initiative was endorsed to be undertaken
in the participating countries.
CACRP co-sponsored the "International
Workshop on Conservation Agriculture for Sustainable Wheat Production
in Rotation with Cotton in Limited Water Resource Areas," jointly
with the Tashkent Institute of Irrigation and Agricultural Mechanization
Engineers (TIIAME) of the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources
(MAWR), Uzbekistan and FAO. The purpose of the meeting was to bring
together farmers, policy-makers, scientists, private sector and decision
makers to share information and experiences, and to encourage further
interactions and development. Over 155 participants from 15 countries
participated in this important event.
A genetic resources documentation workshop
was organized for representatives from the Central Asian PGR Units,
whereas a regional workshop for plant genetic resources units was organized
jointly with USDA in Tashkent to assess the progress made by the various
groups. In addition, another meeting of Central Asian and Trans-Caucasian
Network (CATCN) on Plant Genetic Resources (PGR) was organized jointly
with IPGRI. The participants discussed issues related to strengthening
of PGR activities in the region and approved the proposed work plan
for 2002-2004.
Human
resource development
Considerable emphasis was placed on strengthening the NARS in the region.
A total of 520 CAC scientists and farmers participated in different
international conferences, workshops, seminars, field visits and training
courses. In addition, more than a hundred scientists were trained in
English language skills, and 132 scientists, officials and farmers participated
in various traveling workshops organized in Uzbekistan, Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan
and Tajikistan.
A traveling workshop to Turkey on crop diversification
and soil tillage practices was organized for scientists and farmers
from the Central Asian countries under an ADB-funded project as already
reported under the section on "Highland Regional Program."
Conservation practices, such as zero tillage, minimum tillage, and raised-bed
planting proved very successful for large-scale adoption in the region.
Also, on-farm demonstrations to promote these practices have been taken
up.
Advanced models of soil moisture meters were
also made available to the scientists in Central Asia under the ADB
project and a training course on its use was organized. An automatic
weather station was installed in Kyrgyzstan, and portable soil moisture
meters produced by the scientists of SANIIRI, Uzbekistan were provided
under the ADB-funded project to all the eight countries of the region.
The laboratory of the Karakul Sheep breeding research institute, Samarkand
was renovated and equipped for feed quality analysis under a project
funded by IFAD. A young scientist involved in this project was trained
on feed quality analysis at Macaulay Research Institute in the UK.
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