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50 CHAPTER 2


TABLE 2.4 Percentage of smallholder farmers using purchased seed, by region, 2001 Mpumalanga


Northern Highveld


Percentage of farmers using purchased seed


78 Source: Marnus Gouse, unpublished data.


hypothesis is that Bt maize would control stalk borers, thus reducing fungus levels and concomitantly reducing levels of fumonisin in home-grown maize. Hybrid Bt maize seeds have spread widely in South Africa in recent years but are mainly used by commercial farmers rather than subsistence farmers in the Eastern Cape (see Chapter 1 for a discussion of the spread of GM maize in South Africa). The introduction of Bt maize to small farms in the Eastern Cape is unlikely


to take place without some government assistance, because seed companies would not find it profitable to serve smallholder farmers in these areas. The farmers are poor, do not buy seeds annually (see Table 2.4), and rarely use com- plementary inputs like fertilizer on their soil. Thus, either government exten- sion services must develop Bt hybrids for the region and provide these seeds to farmers, or the government should subsidize private companies to provide these seeds.


Methods and Results of the Rockefeller Study


Maize samples were collected from farmers in three locations in the province of KwaZulu-Natal after harvest. Samples were taken in areas where we were also surveying the economic impact of Bt maize on farmers’ incomes. We con- tacted farmers in our sample who we knew were using Bt maize. In some cases when our contact farmers had already consumed or sold their Bt maize, we contacted their neighbors. Farmers identified the grain as Bt hybrids, non- Bt hybrids, or local varieties. The number of samples varied between 50 and 80 maize samples each year. The mycological analysis was conducted as follows. Briefly, subsamples


of kernels (80–100 grams) were surface sterilized for 1 minute in 3.5 per- cent commercial sodium hypochlorite solution and rinsed twice in sterile dis- tilled water. One hundred kernels (5 kernels/90 millimeter petri dish) were then transferred to malt extract agar (1.5 percent) containing novobiocin (150 milligrams/liter), and the agar plates were incubated at 25°C in the dark


Southern Highveld


76


KwaZulu-Natal Hlabisa


98


Limpopo Venda


81


Mqanduli 13


Eastern Cape


Flagstaff 20


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