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The International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)
was founded in 1967 with a mandate for improving food production
in the humid tropics and to develop sustainable production
systems. It became the first African link in the worldwide
network of agricultural research centers supported by the
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR), now known as the Future Harvest Centers.
IITA
is governed by an international board of trustees and is
staffed by approximately 80 scientists and other professionals
from over 30 countries, and approximately 1300 support staff.
Staff are located at the lbadan campus, and also at stations
in other parts of Nigeria, and in Benin, Cameroon, Côte
dIvoire, and Uganda. Others are located at work sites
in several countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Funding
for iita comes from the cgiar and bilaterally from national
and private donor agencies.
IITAs
mission is to enhance the food security, income, and well-being
of resource-poor people primarily in the humid and subhumid
zones of sub-Saharan Africa by conducting research and related
activities to increase agricultural production, improve
food systems, and sustainably manage natural resources,
in partnership with national and international stakeholders.
IITA
conducts research, germplasm conservation, training, and
information exchange activities in partnership with regional
bodies and national programs including universities, ngos,
and the private sector. The research agenda addresses crop
improvement, plant health, and resource and crop management
within a food systems framework and targeted at the identified
needs of four major agroecological zones: the dry savanna,
the moist savanna, the humid forests, and the midaltitude
savanna. Research focuses on smallholder cropping and postharvest
systems and on the following food crops: cassava, cowpea,
maize, plantain and banana, soybean, and yam.
For
more information about IITA, please visit the official website
at http://www.iita.org
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