✕ CLOSE Online Special City News Entrepreneurship Environment Factcheck Everything Woman Home Front Islamic Forum Life Xtra Property Travel & Leisure Viewpoint Vox Pop Women In Business Art and Ideas Bookshelf Labour Law Letters
Click Here To Listen To Trust Radio Live

AGRO SOLUTIONS: Banana paper could help fight common potato pest

For a potato farmer, there are few moments as discouraging as a run-in with the potato cyst nematode, which causes yellowing leaves and stunted spuds…

For a potato farmer, there are few moments as discouraging as a run-in with the potato cyst nematode, which causes yellowing leaves and stunted spuds to be covered in legions. The pest has been identified in 58 countries, where it has seeped into the soil and caused infection, diminishing crop yields. 

Potato cyst nematodes are microscopic worms that latch on and burrow into the tuber’s roots, causing as much as 70 per cent in yield losses. They can stay dormant inside mature cysts before migrating to potato roots, causing irreparable damage. 

Previous attempts to manage these worms involved alternating potatoes with other crops, spraying the soil with pesticides or planting disease-resistant varieties. However, agricultural areas with smallholder farmers often don’t have the means to afford those options, or are in a situation where they don’t make sense to implement. Instead, certain farmers, like those in sub-Saharan Africa, have resorted to unsustainable clearing of forests as a method to rid their fields from parasitic nematodes.

But researchers have recently discovered a new approach to combat potato cyst nematodes. The low-cost, feasible and eco-friendly solution are bananas.

Called “wrap and plant,” the method was published in Nature Sustainability. It utilizes paper created from banana tree fibers that would normally go unused. In their report, researchers who worked with farmers in Kenya were able to demonstrate how wrapping potato seed in the biodegradable material reduces the infestation and damage to the crop while also increasing yields as much as fivefold.

A number of field tests were conducted to measure the paper’s effectiveness against the nematodes in Kenya, where the pest has been documented as a problem since 2015. These test groups involved seeds wrapped in banana paper dosed with low doses of abamectin (a pesticide that kills nematodes); seeds wrapped in paper without abamectin; seeds planted without any banana paper but in fields sprayed with abamectin; and seeds without banana paper wraps or chemical treatment.

Results showed that the banana paper, with or without the pesticide, prevented potato infestation in the field and increased potato yields and potato size. Potato root systems were denser when paper was used too.

Additional lab studies were conducted, which exposed the nematode to the chemicals released from young potato plants’ roots with and without the banana paper. 

“Nematodes love these chemicals; they stimulate the nematode’s growing process and inform the nematode about the best locations to infect the plant,” Juliet Ochola, the study’s lead author said.

In the published paper, researchers note the banana paper adsorbed 94 per cent of these chemicals, such as alpha-chaconine, for example. “The banana paper, with or without doses of abamectin, disrupts the signaling between the potato and the nematode. The nematode can’t detect those compounds, so it doesn’t grow and doesn’t know where to infect the plant,” Ochola said.

As the banana paper reduced nematode hatching by 85 per cent, researchers believe this tactic could dramatically reduce the need for pesticides in the future.

In eastern Africa, not only Kenya, but also Rwanda and Uganda, this method could benefit millions of producers who rely on potatoes as a cash crop but have been grappling with the cyst nematode and can’t afford pesticides. 

In Kenya alone, the potato sector in agriculture is valued at $US500 million annually, with 800,000 people directly benefiting from potato production and 2.5 million people receiving income from potatoes across the supply chain.

Potato has also been singled out as a crop that can play a vital role in achieving food security amid a growing population due to its adaptability, yielding capacity and nutritional value. According to the International Potato Centre, a research organisation focusing on enhancing affordable nutritious food and related sustainable business opportunities, potato is the third most important food crop in the world, after rice and wheat, in terms of human consumption. More than a billion people worldwide eat potatoes, and global total crop production exceeds 300 million metric tonnes.

Researchers are looking to commercialise the technology, which could further drive economic development in Africa and allow its farmers to produce plenty yields. As wrapping each seed will be a laborious task, they hope a machine can be engineered to take on this part of the process. It is possible, they said, that the approach could be more feasible on larger farms that use mechanical planters. They also plan to do further studies implementing the method on other vegetable crops.

Source: Modern Farmers

LEARN AFFILIATE MARKETING: Learn How to Make Money with Expertnaire Affiliate Marketing Using the Simple 3-Step Method Explained to earn $500-$1000 Per Month.
Click here to learn more.

VAMAZON KDP PUBLISHING: Make $1000-$5000+ Monthly Selling Books On Amazon Even If You Are Not A Writer! Using Your Mobile Phone or Laptop.
Click here to learn more.

GHOSTWRITING SERVICES: Learn How to Make Money As a Ghostwriter $1000 or more monthly: Insider Tips to Get Started. Click here to learn more.
Click here to learn more.

SECRET OF EARNING IN CRYPTO: Discover the Secrets of Earning $100 - $2000 Every Week With Crypto & DeFi Jobs.
Click here to learn more.