This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/africa/8225588.stm
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Banana diseases hit African crops | Banana diseases hit African crops |
(4 days later) | |
Food supplies in several African countries are under threat because two diseases are attacking bananas, food scientists have told the BBC. | Food supplies in several African countries are under threat because two diseases are attacking bananas, food scientists have told the BBC. |
Crops are being damaged from Angola through to Uganda - including many areas where bananas are a staple food. | Crops are being damaged from Angola through to Uganda - including many areas where bananas are a staple food. |
Experts are urging farmers to use pesticides or change to a resistant variety of banana where possible. | Experts are urging farmers to use pesticides or change to a resistant variety of banana where possible. |
Scientists have been meeting in Tanzania to decide how to tackle the diseases, which are spread by insects. | Scientists have been meeting in Tanzania to decide how to tackle the diseases, which are spread by insects. |
'Big danger' | 'Big danger' |
A statement from the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) said "drastic and expensive control measures" were needed. | |
BANANA DISEASES Bunchy topEthiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania, Gabon, DR Congo, Congo Republic, northern Angola and central MalawiBacterial wiltEthiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, western Kenya, north-western Tanzania, North and South Kivu in DR Congo Source: CGIAR | BANANA DISEASES Bunchy topEthiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania, Gabon, DR Congo, Congo Republic, northern Angola and central MalawiBacterial wiltEthiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, western Kenya, north-western Tanzania, North and South Kivu in DR Congo Source: CGIAR |
These include "completely excavating entire banana fields and treating them with pesticides, or burning the plants". | |
Experts say the two diseases - bunchy top viral disease and bacterial wilt - are both spread by insects and very few varieties of banana have resistance to them. | Experts say the two diseases - bunchy top viral disease and bacterial wilt - are both spread by insects and very few varieties of banana have resistance to them. |
While bunchy top stunts the growth of plants by causing leaves to sprout from the top, bacterial wilt kills off plants and makes their fruit inedible. | While bunchy top stunts the growth of plants by causing leaves to sprout from the top, bacterial wilt kills off plants and makes their fruit inedible. |
Christopher Chemirehreh, of the Kawanda Agricultural Research Institute in Uganda, said people were particularly vulnerable in the areas where the diseases were found. | Christopher Chemirehreh, of the Kawanda Agricultural Research Institute in Uganda, said people were particularly vulnerable in the areas where the diseases were found. |
"It's a big danger because the affected areas have the banana as their staple crop," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme. | "It's a big danger because the affected areas have the banana as their staple crop," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme. |
"So if they fail to control the bacterial wilt, their incomes are affected and their food is affected, so it's a very big problem." | "So if they fail to control the bacterial wilt, their incomes are affected and their food is affected, so it's a very big problem." |
Previous version
1
Next version