Bioversity International is a global research-for-development organization. Our vision is that agricultural biodiversity nourishes people and sustains the planet.
We deliver scientific evidence, management practices and policy options to use and safeguard agricultural biodiversity to attain sustainable global food and nutrition security. We work with partners in low-income countries in different regions where agricultural biodiversity can contribute to improved nutrition, resilience, productivity and climate change adaptation.
Bioversity International is a CGIAR Research Centre.
For further information on Bioversity International, consult our Web page at:
www.bioversityinternational.org
West Africa produces 70% of global cocoa but is facing unprecedented challenges with anomalous climates. Extreme temperatures and water stress put pressure on the cocoa sector, including millions of smallholder cocoa producers and the chocolate industry. Current recommendations for cocoa planting material in Ghana do not respond to shifts in regional climatic and agro-ecological conditions. There have been successful efforts to provide solutions to these problems using a scalable citizen science approach[1] for on-farm testing of crop varieties for climate adaptation.
The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, through The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), WOTRO Science for Global Development has awarded a grant to Bioversity International and its partners to execute the project “Cocoa Target: Using citizen science to improve climatic and agro-ecological targeting of varietal recommendations and accelerating planting material access for cocoa farmers in Ghana”. This project will be the first one to apply the citizen science “triadic comparisons of technologies or tricot[2]” approach to a perennial crop, cocoa. Through a strategic public-private-civil society partnership, the project partners will seek to adapt the tricot approach to cocoa variety testing, working particularly with women farmers. Stakeholders of the project will develop and validate processes and guidelines for the production and distribution of selected climatically adapted, stress-tolerant cocoa varieties in a network of nurseries and budwood gardens, to ensure constant variety renewal depending on the emerging needs of farmers and the findings on climate adaptation from on-farm testing. The project partners will design appropriate dissemination and scaling mechanisms by supporting inclusive business development to ensure the delivery of diverse and adapted genetic materials of cocoa addressing the specific demand of farmers.
Bioversity is looking for a Post-Doctoral Fellow to work with a team of experts and different stakeholders to coordinate the project “CocoaTarget: Using citizen science to improve climatic and agro-ecological targeting of varietal recommendations and accelerating planting material access for cocoa farmers in Ghana” and execute high-quality research on cocoa seed systems and farmer variety trials in Ghana.
Based in Ghana, under the supervision of the project leader, the Post-Doctoral Fellow will play a proactive role in coordinating activities and communicating results with project partners and stakeholders. More specifically, s/he will:
Terms and conditions: This is an internationally recruited position. Bioversity International offers an attractive remuneration package including a competitive salary, non-contributory retirement plan, medical insurance, housing allowance and leave provisions. All benefits are denominated and paid in US dollars. The initial contract will be for a period of two years subject to a probationary period of six months.
Applications: Please apply online through the Bioversity International Job Opportunities web page (https://www.bioversityinternational.org/jobs/) by clicking on the “Apply” button, completing the online application and attaching the required information, no later than 16 August 2019. Please note that in the application you are required to provide the contact details (address, telephone number and e-mail address) of at least three referees, whom we will contact for short-listed applicants.
[1] “Citizen Science […] covers a range of different levels of participation: from raising public knowledge about science, encouraging citizens to participate in the scientific process by observing, gathering and processing data, right up to setting scientific agenda and codesigning and implementing science-related policies.” (Source: EC, Horizon 2020, Science with and for society Work Programme 2018-2020, p.30). For more information also visit: http://www.sisnetwork.eu/media/sisnet/Policy_brief_Citizen_Science_SiSnet.pdf
[2] The methodology involves distributing a pool of agricultural technologies in different combinations of three to individual farmers who observe these technologies under farm conditions and compare their performance. Since the combinations of three technologies overlap, statistical methods can piece together the overall performance ranking of the complete pool of technologies (Source: van Etten et al. 2017. First experiences with a novel farmer citizen science approach: crowdsourcing participatory variety selection through on-farm triadic comparisons of technologies (tricot). Experimental Agriculture.
Tagged as: adaptation, recommendations
AI: Hello human, I am a GPT powered AI chat bot. Ask me anything!