Cameroon - Cameroon’s main agricultural products include plantains, cattle meat, cocoa beans, taro, bananas, maize, fresh vegetables and groundnuts. Cameroon's primary export crops are cocoa, cotton, coffee, bananas, rubber and palm oil
Angola - Angola's main agricultural crops include cassava, corn, beans, potatoes, sweet potatoes, soy, bananas, coffee, rice, vegetables and fruits.
Tanzania - Cassava, paddy, sorghum and bananas are the second most widely grown staple crops by farmers. 68 percent of Tanzania's work force engage in farming, both in rural and urban areas
Botswana - Botswana-Major crops grown in Botswana are sorghum, maize, millet and cowpeas.
Lesotho's primary crops are corn (maize), beans, wheat, sorghum, and peas.
South Africa -Maize is most widely grown, followed by wheat, sugar cane and sunflowers. Citrus and deciduous fruits are exported, as are locally produced wines and flowers. South Africa is not only self-sufficient in virtually all major agricultural products, but is also a net food exporter.
Mozambique - Maize and cassava, the main food staples, are grown by 80 percent of all Mozambican smallholders and cover over a third of cultivated land. Other important staples are wheat and rice. Animal production plays a fundamental role in the lives and nutrition of the rural population, particularly poultry and small ruminants.
Benin - farmers cultivate plots between one and two hectares in size, with 85% of farmers growing corn, 30% cassava, 31% yams, 30% sorghum, and interestingly, only 11% grow cotton, the principal cash crop for the country.
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Rwanda - Tea and coffee are the major exports while plantains, cassava, potatoes, sweet potatoes, maize and beans are the most productive crops.
Uganda - food crops have been plantains, cassava, sweet potatoes, millet, sorghum, corn, beans, and groundnuts. Major cash crops have been coffee, cotton, tea, cocoa, vanilla and tobacco.
Ethiopia - Africa's second biggest maize producer.Principal crops include coffee, pulses (e.g., beans), oilseeds, cereals, potatoes, sugarcane, and vegetables. Exports are almost entirely agricultural commodities, and coffee is the largest foreign exchange earner.
Namibia - pearl millet, sorghum, maize, wheat, beans, alfalfa and some fruit and vegetables (melons, grapes, tomatoes). Agriculture in Namibia is based mainly on livestock farming.
Swaziland - Maize, cotton, sugar, woodpulp, citrus and forestry products are the traditional agricultural products of the country. Maize is the staple food of the Swazi Nation and approximately two- thirds of utilized arable land is under maize.
Egypt - Cotton, rice, clover and sugar cane are all major crops of Egypt. Farmers also grow different kinds of beans to eat, as well as citrus fruits like oranges, tomatoes and potatoes.
Zimbabwe - The major crops grown in Zimbabwe are: maize, cotton, soyabeans and wheat