PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
Contact: Amanda Aranowski
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: aaranowski@scisoc.org
Plant Pathologists Unpeel Rumors
of Banana Extinction
St. Paul, MN (February 14, 2003) Will bananas really
become extinct within the next decade? Not likely says a plant pathologist
with the American Phytopathological Society (APS).
The plant pathologist is speaking out in response to
an article that recently appeared in New Scientist depicting
possible extinction due to the impact of two diseases, Black Sigatoka and
Panama disease, on the global production of bananas.
“Diseases are, and will remain, major constraints
to both export and subsistence production of banana, and there is no doubt
that Black Sigatoka and Panama disease constitute the most important
threats,” said Randy C. Ploetz, Professor at the University of
Florida’s Tropical Research and Education Center. “However, it
is unlikely that these problems will cause production to decrease greatly
in the next decade, let alone that the crop will become extinct,” said
Ploetz.
According
to Ploetz, Black Sigatoka
affects diverse bananas used in subsistence agriculture, as well as the
Cavendish cultivars that are used in export production. It is a serious
foliar disease, but does not kill plants and is well
controlled in export plantations with fungicides. In contrast, Panama disease is soil-borne and fatal. A
new variant of the pathogen, tropical race 4, affects Cavendish cultivars
in Southeast Asia and, thus, has raised concerns in the export trades.
The spread of
tropical race 4 to the Americas would require either infected banana
suckers or infested soil to be imported from Asia, both of which are
strictly forbidden in the export-producing countries, said Ploetz. “If
tropical race 4 did spread to the Western Hemisphere, damage would be
restricted by the containment and eradication measures that would follow
and the fact that the export trades rely on pathogen-free, tissue cultured
plants to establish plantations,” he said.
Ploetz said
development of new hybrid bananas, as well as those produced via genetic
transformation, must continue in order to supply producers with productive
cultivars that resist important diseases, nematodes and insects.
The American
Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional scientific
organization dedicated to the study and control of plant diseases with
5,000 members worldwide.
|