Skip to main content

Berly Fernandez-Tatoy – Wizard Of Community Science, Filipino

Berly Fernandez-Tatoy deserves to be declared a National Scientist, that is my opinion. Here is Ms Berly’s remarkable story, shared by Mayang Davide on Facebook, as a multi-researcher of the Department of Agriculture (DA) Region 10 (North Mindanao), dedicating her professional life to reinventing science as a servant of the farmers, by the farmers, for the farmers.

Searching for answers and solutions to the challenges that plague particularly small Filipino farmers, uncommon Ms Berly has produced outstanding results in 4 collective areas of investigative agriculture with the community as partners in research, in what is called Community-Based Participatory Action Research (CPAR):

(1)   Vegetables:9 community-proven organic pesticides & fertilizers for 7 vegetables

(2)   Rice: 4 Next Generation rice lines identified with community

(3)   Potato:Community production of disease-free Granola potato seeds

(4)   Coconut-Based Farming: Community growing of coconut-based vegetables with goat.

Vegetables:
Via CPAR, Ms Berly has taught communities the production of organic pesticides and fertilizers. She has encouraged diversified cropping with cabbage, carrots, eggplant, pole sitao, cucumber, tomato & sweet pepper. She has promoted community gardens in partnerships with high schools in Northern Mindanao and DA’s Farmer Field Schools.

Rice:
Also via CPAR, Ms Berly has produced NextGen rice varieties, 4 identified by community as outstanding: NSIC RC 216, NSIC RC 238, NSIC RC 300, NSIC RC 308 for lowland irrigated and adverse rice ecosystems: rainfed and saline conditions. They are now PhilRice-recommended.

Potato:
In North Mindanao, the seed-borne disease bacterial wilt used to restrict potato to an average yield of 7.5 tons/ha. Under the concept of CPAR, Ms Berly studied the behavior of the market-driven potato variety Granola at the community level, and came up with the “Seed Plot Technique.” This seed system used available local resources like bamboo, used sacks combined with bio-fumigation technology (sunflower) to defeat the bacterial enemy. This system has eliminated farmer dependence on imported seed pieces. Bacterial infection is now down to zero, and average yield has increased more than 3 times, to 25 tons/ha. From the Bureau of Agricultural Research, this CPAR group of farmers has received several awards, being among the best CPAR organizations not only in Northern Mindanao but also in the country.

Ms Betty has also encouraged community production of food products: potato chips, pastries, and polvoron (short bread). All of the above has led to the productivity, profitability and sustainability of the potato industry in Northern Mindanao.

Coconut-Based Farming
Again, via CPAR, Ms Berly has promoted the growing of vegetables, as well as the raising of goats, under the coconut trees. Vegetables with coconuts have greatly multiplied farmer income, increasing from P39,000 with coconut monocropping to P236,000 with goat integration, a six-fold increase! This can be seen indirectly in very noticeable improved living conditions of the farmers.

Today, the CPAR farmers’ organization is among active producers and distributors of vegetables, providing the produce to local markets in nearby Balingasag town and also the Agora market in Cagayan de Oro City.

That is all what then-ICRISAT Director General William Dar described in 5 words: “Science with a human face.”@517


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Historical PH 1st Holy Mass: Mazaua Or Limasawa? Fr Amalla Vs Maria Serena Diokno Vs Ambeth Ocampo – And The Priest Is Right!

We Filipinos celebrate 500 years of Christianity today Wednesday, 31 March 2021, Christianity brought to pagans by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan sailing the seas for Spain. The historical question is: Where was the first Holy Mass celebrated: “Limasawa” (in Leyte) or “Mazaua” (in Butuan)? Catholic priest Fr Joesilo C Amalla has just published the book (above), An Island They Called Mazaua, that argues the island of “Mazaua” in Butuan is the “true site of first Holy Mass in the Philippines [1] ”  and not “Limasawa” in Leyte (ANN, 07 January 2021, Manila Times ). The declaration and discussion are made by Butuan-based Fr Amalla in his 644-page book. Among other things, he writes: The truth is that the prevailing state- and church-affirmation and multiple reaffirmations of the island of Limasawa as the site of that first Holy Mass have no factual, historical and geographic (bases) whatsoever nor any shred of evidentiary support from cartographic studies, navigational info...

The PhilRice Drum Seeder Looked Good In April 2018 – Where Is It Now?

Above, top image, the Antique ricefield looks very promising in yield. Here is the story as shared on Facebook by PhilRice (my translation in English): TINGNAN! Unang palayan sa Sta. Ana, Tibiao, Antique na natamnan ng 60kg binhi kada ektarya sa pamamagitan ng sabog-tanim. Look! First ricefield in Santa Ana, Tibiao, Antique that was planted with 60 kg seeds per hectare by way of broadcasting. Sa kauna-unahang pagkakataon, natunghayan ng mga magsasaka sa nasabing lugar na kayang-kaya ang 60kg kada ektarya gamit ang seed spreader machine (granular applicator) at certified seeds mula sa RCEF. For the first time ever, farmers in that area witnessed that 60 kg/ha is quite enough using a seed spreader machine (granular applicator) and certified seeds from RCEF. Makikita sa larawan na magaganda ang naging tubo at mabubulas ang mga itinanim na palay. What can be seen in the picture is beautiful growth of and robust rice plants. Ayon sa ulat, namangha ang mga magsasaka rito na kay...

07, The More The Merrier – P1B From DA Supportive Of 10 Bataan Model Farms Leading PH Agriculture

Very optimistic – and excited – was Secretary of Agriculture William Dar after visiting 2 model 1-ha farms in the villages of Daang Bago and San Simon in the town of Dinalupihan, Bataan, Friday, 19 February 2021. He said in the DA news release “Bataan Model Farms Demonstrate Future Of Philippine Agriculture” (20 February 2021): I am thrilled to have seen the progress of this rice-high-value crops diversification system evolving in the Municipality of Dinalupihan. We were here when the idea was being conceived in 2019 and now it has really started its journey, its development. As an agriculturist and a communicator for development in the last 45 years, I know: That it is all markedly historical for the Philippines. The cropping calls for rice in the wet season, and high-value crops (vegetables) in the dry season, with fertigation (fertilization via irrigation). And the technology-setup is replicated 10 times in the same municipality. (I don’t know why, but 60-year old foreign-funde...