Jamaica Gleaner

Crop simulation modelling augurs well for Caribbean agricultur­e

- Petre Williams-Raynor/ Contributi­ng Editor pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

THE CLIMATE-CHANGE threat to food security has left Jamaica and the Caribbean in search of an effective response to safeguard their ability to feed their people over the long term, and it appears they have found one.

It is called crop simulation modelling (CSM) and is championed by Jamaican researcher Dr Dale Rankine, who made it the primary focus of his PhD, which earned him high commendati­ons and was awarded the best thesis in the science category for 2014/2015.

CSM also appears to be gaining ground among others in the region, including Jamaica’s Minister of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries Audley Shaw. For Rankine, there is little wonder why.

“To do modelling on agricultur­e, crop simulation modelling is the leading approach. What modelling does is allows you to experiment with a number of different options to see how your production changes under different conditions,” he told The Gleaner.

“If you think in terms of any long-term crop, like yam, for example, yam is a one-year crop. If I farm yam in Trelawny and you came to me and said, ‘Dale, I want to farm this yam in St Elizabeth’, you would have to farm the yam in St Elizabeth and wait for it one year to fail or to succeed to know how it will do,” Rankine added.

“What I can do with CSM, after I have grown a variety in one or two locations for at least two seasons, is to model the parametres that mimic what the growth is in the field to see what I get. It is a very powerful tool and the most economic means of assessing your productivi­ty under a range of different conditions,” Rankine said further.

FOOD SECURITY

AquaCrop, developed by the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) to address food security and assess the effect of the environmen­t and management on crop production, is one such tool. There are, too, software packages, including the Decision Support System for Agro Technology Transfer (DSSAT), which comprises crop simulation models for more than 40 crops.

DSSAT is supported by a range of utilities and applicatio­ns for weather, soil, genetic, crop management, and observatio­nal experiment­al data and includes example data sets for all crop models. Among the 40 crops are many that are grown in the Caribbean, including sugar cane, cassava, tomato, Irish potato, peanuts, and pineapple. Others include rice, soy beans, chick peas, dry beans, potato, sweet dasheen, sunflower, sweet pepper and cabbage.

Both the FAO’s AquaCrop and DSSAT were the subjects of a recent training workshop in Jamaica, which was primarily supported by the Adaptation Programme and Financing Mechanism of the Pilot Programme for Climate Resilience (PPCR) Jamaica, which is financed through the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank.

Rankine has himself undergone training in DSSAT on a number of occasions and is passionate about sharing his knowledge. He does so as the agricultur­al climate modelling research analyst with the PPCR.

The recent Jamaica workshop brought together more than 20 stakeholde­rs, including agronomist­s, agricultur­al extension officers, agro-meteorolog­ists, farmers, and researcher­s, for both basic and advanced training in DSSAT and AquaCrop. Participan­ts were drawn from not only Jamaica, but also Barbados, Belize, Guyana, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago.

Rankine is now seeking to have tangible results from the training sessions, beginning with the establishm­ent of the Caribbean Consortium of Crop Modellers, formed with a Whatsapp group and an email group, following CSM training done in Trinidad in April.

“This way, members are able to get constant help in what they are able to do,” he noted.

 ??  ?? Participan­ts at the recent CSM workshop are intent on their training.
Participan­ts at the recent CSM workshop are intent on their training.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? These trainees are all ears at the recent CSM training held in Kingston.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS These trainees are all ears at the recent CSM training held in Kingston.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Dr Dale Rankine
CONTRIBUTE­D Dr Dale Rankine

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