Common
bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L) is the most important and widely
cultivated among four other Phaseolus species (scarlet runner, tepary,
Lima, year-long bean) following a process of agricultural domestication
and adaptation, and is the most important grain legume species in
Eastern and Southern Africa. Common bean originated in Latin
America but is now cultivated worldwide in diverse environments. Two
major gene pools are recognized: the large-seeded Andean and
small-seeded Middle American, which correspond to the crop’s two
centers of origin and diversity. Over time, selection of desirable plant
and seed types have resulted in a rich diversity of landraces. A
short season crop usually maturing from 65-110 days after planting,
common bean exhibits a rich diversity in seed characteristics (size,
shape and color), growth habits and adaptation traits.
Introduced
to the eastern Africa coast by Portuguese traders in the sixteenth
century, common bean quickly became established as a food crop in many
environments of Africa. Presently, it is the second most important
source of human dietary protein, and the third most important source of
calories for over 100 million people in rural and poor urban communities
in Africa. Its protein is cheaper than the animal form, making it
highly competitive and important in dietary regimes of poor people in
Africa. Many plant parts are cooked -- leaves, green pods, green seed --
but dry grain is the most important product. Per capita bean consumption
is highest in Africa, reaching 55 kg /yr in Rwanda and 66 kg/yr in
western Kenya. Consumer preferences for seed types, color, shape, and
brilliance or seed coat luster of dry bean vary greatly even within a
country. However, many consumers also place value upon sweet taste and
fast cooking attributes, and varieties that excel in these respects
sometimes obtain higher prices than those having the most attractive
seed appearance.
Over
4 million hectares of beans are sown each year in Africa. The two
main environments are the cool highlands of East and Central
African countries (including Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and
Burundi) and the warmer mid-elevation areas of DR Congo, Ethiopia, and
several countries of Southern Africa. Production tends to be more
intensive where human population density is high, although a significant
proportion of production occurs in areas of moderately low
populations. Sole crop, maize-bean, banana-beans and root or tuber
crop-bean intercrops are important among the many bean cropping systems
in Africa and for which the crop’s rapid maturity and shade tolerance
make it particularly suitable. Production is primarily by
smallholder farmers, and especially by women (bean is commonly referred
to as a woman’s crop), traditionally for home consumption and now
increasingly for income generation. Often, women and men often have
different aims in producing the crop, and therefore seek varieties
having different sets of characteristics.
Variation
in growth habit appears to be continuous from determinate bush,
indeterminate and vigorous climbing bean types. Bush beans are the
most predominant types grown in Africa. However, climbing beans,
originally restricted to small pockets of higher and more fertile soil
in northern Rwanda, northeast DR Congo and Malawi are now spreading to
other areas and countries, particularly those where land is limiting and
human population density is high.
Of
about 9 commercial seed types grown in Africa, the Calima (Rosecoco or
mottled red) and the reds (large and small) account for about 50% of the
production, primarily because of their high market demand. Other market
classes include the navy beans, cream-colored, brown tan, yellow types,
purples, white and blacks. Typically, three to six easily distinguished
cultivars account for 95% of production in a bean producing community.
Diversity is greatest in the Great Lakes Region where beans are
produced, marketed and consumed as complex varietal mixtures. In
Rwanda, mixtures average 11 components and may contain as many as 27.
Farmers maintain and adjust the mixtures according to growing
conditions.
The
common bean suffers from several biotic and abiotic production
constraints. Biotic constraints in order of descending importance in
Africa include angular leaf spot, anthracnose, bean stem maggot,
bruchids, and root rots among others. Major abiotic constraints
include nitrogen and phosphorus deficiency, low pH complex and drought.
Severity of root rots and bean stem maggot is aggravated by certain
abiotic stresses. Many of the preferred landraces and popular
commercial varieties are susceptible to many of these constraints and
are targets of the breeding efforts carried out in Africa, and which
often draw upon the wider range of germplasm and traits available from
Latin America.