

Page 65
Journal of Clinical & Experimental Pharmacology | ISSN: 2161-1459 | Volume: 8
International Conference on
July 18-19, 2018 | Atlanta, USA
Pharmacology and Ethnopharmacology
11
th
International Conference and Exhibition on
Pharmaceutical Oncology
&
From ethnobotany to mainstream agriculture: New crops for subsistence farmers in the tropics
Roger R B Leakey
International Tree Foundation, United Kingdom
Statement of the Problem:
Tropical agriculture is both failing local people and the environment with serious impacts on food and
nutritional security, poverty, the global well-being of society and the planet. Addressing this problem requires a new mindset that
recognizes the need to reverse the cycle of land degradation and social deprivation that drives the complex processes that result in
very low and declining yields of staple food crops – creating a yield gap.
Methodology &Theoretical Orientation:
To achieve this, African smallholder farmers have requested help to diversify their farming
systems with new crops that produce the traditionally and culturally-important food and medicinal products that their ancestors used
to gather from forests and woodlands. Cultivating these nutritious and ecologically important species producing locally marketable
products creates healthier agroecosystems and income generation opportunities; as well as new business possibilities. Over the
last 25 years, techniques and strategies to allow a decentralized and participatory approach to the rapid domestication of these
ethnobotanically important species have been applied and implemented in over 500 communities in Cameroon.
Findings:
The results have been very positive and are being increasingly adopted and up-scaled, involving some 50 species. (1)
Communities can select individual trees with desirable traits from among the 3- to 10-fold intraspecific variation available at the
village-level. (2) These species are high amenable to simple, low-technology horticultural techniques for cultivar development that
can be implemented at the village level. (3) Participating communities have reported numerous social and economic benefits from
the domestication and cultivation of these species: and, in parallel, increased staple crop yields resulting from improved soil fertility
and health.
Conclusion & Significance:
There are great opportunities to develop new tropical crops producing culturally important foods and
traditional medicines to transform subsistence agriculture and the lives of local people and benefit the global environment.
rogerleakey@btinternet.comClin Exp Pharmacol 2018, Volume: 8
DOI: 10.4172/2161-1459-C1-029