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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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Maize
Pests of Plants
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GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
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GHANA 2024. Insect damage on maize and soy crops
21 August 2024. Chereponi, North-East Region, Ghana. Insect damage to maize plant.
08/21/2024
Credit
©FAO/Fanjan Combrink
Related URL
https://www.fao.org/newsroom/story/cultivating-fonio-cultivating-traditions/en
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
17.73 MB
Unique ID
UF17R8B
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
The FAO visited Cheriponi, northern Ghana, to explore fonio, a resilient crop that thrives in arid regions, while emphasizing the importance of food as a basic human right.
Chef Binta, born and raised in Sierra Leone and now based in Accra, Ghana, draws her culinary inspiration from the family and community cooking traditions of the Fulani people. In 2022, she became the first African to win the Basque Culinary World Prize. She is using the prize money to establish the Fulani Kitchen Foundation, which supports women farmers by promoting the cultivation of fonio, a type of millet, as a supplementary source of income. With support from the FAO, Binta is improving the livelihoods of local women by training around 100 fonio farmers in good agricultural practices and addressing challenges like low yields.