[HCARC] Remember The song - Yes We Have No Bananas, We Have No Bananas Today??
Gary J - N5BAA
qltfnish at omniglobal.net
Tue Dec 17 19:39:42 EST 2013
YES, there was a time when bananas were rare fruit, seldom seen in a grocery or a fruit market. That was before the discovery of the Cavendish Banana (the primary banana grown today) which are all descendants of One Banana Tree which was immune from the last go around of fungi, etc that destroyed the worlds banana plantations. Monocultures, in this case a clone means that there is no genetic diversity and what attacks one will attack all. Well folks, we may again be singing the song Yes We Have No Bananas once again.
Scientists ‘incredibly concerned’ for fate of banana as plagues and fungus infections spread across world’s supplies
The world’s supply of bananas is under threat from plagues of bugs and fungal infections which could be disastrous if they continue to spread, researchers say.
The government in Costa Rica, one of the biggest suppliers of the fruit, has already declared a “national emergency” over the state of its crop.
The country’s half-a-billion-dollar banana export industry has been hit by two separate plagues of mealybugs and scale insects, with up to 20 per cent of its produce written off.
Meanwhile, a Scientific American report warned of a variant of banana-eating fungus which is currently threatening key plantations around the world.
Scientists believed the disease, caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp.cubense (Foc), was limited to parts of Asia and Australia. Yet it has now been found in Jordan and Mozambique, and in a new strain to which the vast majority of bananas are susceptible.
“It’s a gigantic problem,” said Rony Swennen, a breeder at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Gert Kema, a Fusarium researcher at Wageningen University and Research Centre in the Netherlands, co-authored the report on the disease in Jordan.
He told Scientific American: “I’m incredibly concerned. I will not be surprised if it pops up in Latin America in the near future.”
Combined with the threat of bugs, researchers said the Foc-TR4 strain could threaten banana exports across the whole of Latin American and the Caribbean – which accounts for more than 80 per cent of the world’s supply.
Gary J
N5BAA
HCARC Secretary 2013/14
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