It is empirical to state that, no
matter the required amounts of rainfall and sunshine that nature brings coupled
with the exact quantity of farm inputs used in any traditional system of cereals
cultivation, if the appropriate plant pollination does not take place as
expected, the farmer would most likely harvest nothing by the end of the
farming season.
Studies
elsewhere have shown that, a greater percentage of pollination is carried out
by bees, indicating that without these insects farming of crops that flower
during their gestation periods would have been considered nonprofit making
ventures by many farmers.
In
the United States of America for instance, the apis mellifera – better known as the Western honeybee, adds more
than US$15billion in value to farming each year. From the almond orchards of
central California – where each spring billions of honeybees from across the
U.S.A arrive to pollinate a multibillion dollar crop, to the blueberry bogs of
Maine, the bees are regarded the unsung and unpaid labourers of the American
agricultural system due to their significant contributions.
In view of how significant bees are to farming,
many Americans have thus ventured into beekeeping as a business due to the
death of colony of bees in recent times in many parts of USA, leading to high
demand for the insects by farmers to help boost pollination in their farming
activities.
Here in Ghana, about eighty farmers in the West
Mamprusi District of the Northern Region are also being introduced to the practice
of beekeeping for crop pollination in addition to the economic advantage they
get in the form of income through the sale of honey and honey products.
Beekeeping is
one livelihood venture which when started could continuously give the communities
income and food at least twice in a year. Its potential as a business is yet to
be realized especially by groups wishing to start up small-scale business.
According to
experts, honey continues to command good prices both in the domestic and
international markets. There is a market for beeswax and beekeepers could also
trade in bees themselves.
The initiative by the West Mamprusi District Assembly
through the support of German-based organisation, Hanns-Seidel-Foundation, intends to promote sustainable land
management activities which will enhance thick forest growth, preserve breeding
grounds of various plant and animal species, and provide buffers for changing
habitats in the Mishio and Zua communities.
It
will also provide incentives for vulnerable community members to adapt to
climate change through the introduction of apiary (beekeeping) development
concept. Through series of technical training/education and provision of
beekeeping equipment to selected farmers, the activity will create the enabling
environment for conservation and development to happen concurrently.
honey processed forsale |
The Project Coordinator Issifu Sulemana Jobila
told Savannahnews, in order to protect trees and sustain the gains made
under the project, it is important that, better rural technology and options are
introduced to pay for such environmental services, hence the introduction of
apiary concept.
The
introduction of bee-keeping, he said, will complement and speed up the growth
rate of the natural regenerated vegetation through pollination, diversify rural
economy from charcoal production thus reducing poor rural women overdependence
on the natural vegetation, boost their nutritional needs progressively and
provide large scale of economic income.
In
2011, the West Mamprusi District Assembly was awarded a grant of GH¢80,000.00 by
Hanns-Seidel-Foundation, a German-based non-governmental organisation to undertake
a nine-month project dubbed “Fighting Climate Change Through
Reforestation”.
The project which is currently phasing out has the
overall goal of increasing tree population in order to effectively combat
desertification and land degradation in the West Mamprusi District as well as contribute
to ongoing global efforts in the fight against climate change.
The project also seeks to create awareness, support
community members with alternative livelihood occupations and further
strengthen civil society capacity to take up their own initiatives in the fight
against climate change.
Fighting
climate change is a key objective outlined in the Medium Term Development Plan
(MTDP) of the West Mamprusi District Assembly. Thus, the Assembly identified two communities namely; Zua and
Mishio as areas for the implementation of the project.
The Zua and Mishio communities which are located along
the White Volta River are prone to climate change variability and its
associated risks. They are also seriously experiencing desertification due to
intensive farming activities carried out all year round along the river banks.
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