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Tissue culture removes obstacle to control of banana nematodes

Tissue culture removes obstacle to control of banana nematodes

To get rid of banana nematodes without using chemicals, farmers in East Africa had to uproot all infected plants, grow a break crop, and then replant with pest-free bananas. But, they couldn’t be sure that the new banana plants were free of nematodes. Now, low-cost tissue culture removes this obstacle and makes mass plantings of disease-free bananas possible. The break crop plus tissue-culture plantlet method was proven by farmers in Kayunga and Kayanamukaka, Uganda. Their soils were badly infested with nematodes but they didn’t want to use harmful pesticides. Now, a laboratory in Uganda produces 10 million plantlets a year by tissue culture. So, this technology has major potential for banana production in East Africa and for poor producers.


Region: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda
Date published: 2007
Published by: Research Into Use
Type of resource: Research output overview
Resource topic: Banana


Project/Programme: Not specific
Pest/Disease: Nematodes
Pages: 6
File type: PDF (688 KB)

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