4.7 Article

Constraints to Cultivation of Medicinal Plants by Smallholder Farmers in South Africa

Journal

HORTICULTURAE
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/horticulturae7120531

Keywords

conservation; cultivation; biodiversity; medicinal plants; smallholder farmer; strategy

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Funding

  1. Central University of Technology, Free State [RGS/PDF/ICNwafor/02]

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The paper explores the challenges faced by subsistent farmers in cultivating medicinal plants and recommends providing more research support and targeted incentives to promote their involvement. This can help improve smallholder livelihoods and protect indigenous biodiversity for future generations.
Growing demand for therapeutic products from indigenous medicinal plants has led to increased interest in its cultivation, which presents a viable option for improving smallholder farmers' livelihoods, as well as sustaining the availability of these resources for future generations. Serious bottlenecks however exist for subsistent farmers in the cultivation of these valuable plants. It was pertinent to probe whether the cultivation of medicinal plants provides feasible solutions to rural poverty, while effectively conserving threatened indigenous biodiversity. The paper employed a comprehensive review of existing literature to explore issues constraining smallholder farmers from involvement in a potentially lucrative plant value chain. Findings indicate challenges such as inadequate domestication of valuable plants species, continued over-harvesting from wild populations, poor knowledge of required agronomic practices, low efficacy perception regarding derivatives from cultivated plants, among others. These constraints occur alongside the conservation-oriented strategy driven by international conservation agencies and wholly adopted by the South African government. Recommendations to improve smallholder involvement in the cultivation of medicinal plants include support to research and extension, targeted inducement to smallholders, contracting and off-take agreements, aimed at promoting an alternative poverty-alleviation-focused economic development strategy. The review adds to the conceptual discourse related to plant diversity, resource conservation, poverty alleviation, and economic development

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