On NH27, the two-lane span of highway from Lucknow to Barabanki is thick with unruly trucks making their way through the smog into what is essentially sweet country. Sugar mills and fields of cane regularly dot the passing landscape. Also at hand is a less sweet cousin, filling plantations that sprawl for acre after acre in eye-popping green. Banana, that rich source of potassium and phallic wit, is one of the major crops of this area바카라as it is in Bihar and Maharashtra, and a lot of south India. The jovial fruit is, however, attracting more than humour these days.
The news, in fact, is a little grave바카라and is not being much talked about officially so as not to cause a scare. Along with the commercially viable banana varieties from the West, India seems to have imported a debilitating fungal infection. It바카라s ruining not just the crop, but the soil itself. And the farmers don바카라t know that yet.
Mineet Mishra, a 28-year-old farmer, has about an acre where he predominantly grows the Grand Nain strain, source of the commercial Cavendish bananas, aside from wheat on the side. He turns away and chuckles when fungus is mentioned, and asks a helper to cut down a plant. Just a few hacks later, the tree succumbs바카라as if it바카라s almost willing to fall바카라and reveals the rotting inside of the stem. 바카라We바카라ve seen some plants in nearby fields fall with just one push. Anti-fungal medicines don바카라t work on this,바카라 Mishra tells Outlook.
It wasn바카라t just one. The men went ahead and chopped down several plants they knew were susceptible, from the last batch awaiting harvest. All were in varying stages of decay. His fields hold about 1,500 banana plants, and Mishra says, 바카라Between 12 and 14 out of every batch of 100바카라150 plants have rotted this year.바카라 Signs of the fungal attack cropped up some two years ago, and the rot has just become deeper.


An affected stem
The troubling thing is, there was advance warning. Like a crop growing anew every year, this pattern too has been repeating, like a dark rhythm, through the years. There바카라s little chance Mishra would have known of the screaming headline in The New York Times from 2008, 바카라Yes! We Have No Bananas바카라, which itself reprised the title of a popular 1922 Broadway hit. That song came from the travails of a grocer who ran out of bananas. It was a fungal disease that wiped out Gros Michel, the standard variety of banana then. Called Panama Disease or Fusarium wilt, the fungus spread from Panama, where it originated, to Costa Rica, then Guatemala, and ventured further south into Colombia and Ecuador. The disease annihilated the Gros Michel by the 1950s, and was estimated to have cost $2.3 billion worth of losses.
The Gros Michel was then replaced by the Cavendish banana, the most internationally traded variety now, and the only one most of America and Britain has ever tasted. However, another strain of Fusarium wilt, Tropical Race 4 (TR4), is now threatening the Cavendish, and has geneticists and scientists across the world scurrying back to their laboratories.
TR4 has already ravaged farms in Taiwan, where it was first spotted in 1990, and moved westwards while consolidating the eastern front. Cases have been found in China, Malaysia and Australia while the virus spread to Mozambique in 2013, Lebanon and Pakistan in 2015, to Israel, Laos and Vietnam in the following years, and to Myanmar this year.
India, the world바카라s largest producer of bananas, was a prize frontier. But it seems to have fallen바카라rendering vulnerable most of its 29,779.91 thousand tonnes, which account for 29.19 per cent of all global production. In 2016, a report by R.Thangavelu, the principal scientist of plant pathology at the National Research Centre for Banana, Tiruchirapalli, was devoted to surveying the damage. Titled 바카라Status report on Fusarium wilt disease in India바카라, it said crops in the Latehar and Purnea districts of Bihar had been ravaged바카라a 바카라perennial system of cultivation, especially in Bihar바카라continuous cultivation of the same variety in the same field바카라 had contributed to further incidences. No wonder those banana farmers in Bihar have since shifted to maize.
The TR4 strain is now being seen in Faizabad and Barabanki in Uttar Pradesh. Devendra Verma, a farmer in Barabanki, says cases have increased over the past three years and 바카라this year was the worst바카라. He describes the fungus as something that 바카라eats up the plant from the inside바카라. The name, Fusarium wilt, is fairly literal바카라it makes the plant wilt, sucking the life out of it by clogging it from its roots.
What바카라s worse than thousands of tonnes of crop being vulnerable to a new disease? The soil. 바카라Once the soil is affected, that pathogen will stay for thirty years,바카라 a scientist with NRCB tells Outlook, pleading anonymity. Besides, the fungus can easily spread by contact. 바카라If we use even water from the area, it easily spreads바카라or even when tractor tyres go through the area,바카라 says the scientist. Researchers in the West suggest the high mobility of banana technicians is contributing to the epidemic. They are also probably thanking the heavens that the new strain hasn바카라t hit Latin America, home of the 바카라banana republics바카라 that account for about 80 per cent of its exports.
India sets much store by it too. The banana industry here is worth about Rs 50,000 crore; production increased by a whopping 1,477 per cent between 2005바카라06 and 2010바카라11. According to the NRCB, out of about 360 varieties of banana grown across India, between 55 and 60 per cent of the land under cultivation, and 65 per cent of production, is now of the Cavendish variety바카라both figures having doubled over the past decade. It has become the staple banana in north India. It바카라s there on your breakfast table.


Since banana is a monoculture crop grown round the year in most parts, the Cavendish바카라s susceptibility to the disease may lead to unforeseen damage. Sources within the NRCB say the government doesn바카라t want 바카라panic바카라 among farmers. The scientist says the government is taking 바카라internal domestic quarantine measures바카라 and sensitising farmers about the 바카라devastation it can cause바카라. However, there is still denial. B.V. Patil, president of the Banana Grower Association of India, says reports of Fusarium wilt are 바카라false바카라.
In the 105-page annual report of the NRCB, the words 바카라Fusarium wilt바카라 popped up 52 times바카라itself an index of the concern. The 바카라Job Opportunities!바카라 tab on their website has two posts up for grabs, those of researchers, with the senior research fellow to work on a 바카라Collaborative research project on breeding for improved bananas with Fusarium Wilt (Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense) resistance바카라.
Awareness on the ground is pretty low. Farmers Outlook spoke to are certainly in the dark. Scientists are at another level of vexing mystery바카라there바카라s no sure-shot cure yet, and they바카라re still trying to devise one. They are also worried that the hoo-haa over TR4 may obscure its older cousin, TR1, which ravaged the Gros Michel. 바카라Everybody is fretting about TR4, while it바카라s TR1 that바카라s affecting the Grand Nain in southern states. If you see in Tamil Nadu, the Tirunelveli area is much affected by TR1. It has spread to Karnataka and Maharashtra, and we have recorded cases even from Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat. Earlier, the Grand Nain was not affected by Fusarium wilt, but now different strains are affecting it,바카라 says the NRCB scientist.
Even more troublingly, the strain may also have hit indigenous varieties, which may otherwise also be integral to finding a solution. "TR4 is a dangerous strain," says Dr Anita Cherian K, professor and head of the department of plant pathology at the Kerala Agricultural University. "We are conducting a survey to check if TR4 is present because it could attack Cavendish. Right now we don't have it. Nendran, which belongs to the plantain group, shows symptoms of Fusarium wilt, which could be suspected to be TR4," she adds. However, the NRCB says that the plantain is not susceptible to the TR4 strain of fusarium wilt. Nendran is Kerala바카라s iconic variety바카라bestowed with a GI tag and source for the famous banana chips.
바카라There바카라s a gene in some wild species and traditional bananas in India that바카라s resistant to Fusarium wilt. We have done extensive work, planted all varieties in Bihar and screened them so we know exactly which types of bananas are tolerant to this strain of Fusarium wilt,바카라 says the NRCB scientist. If traditional bananas show resistance, those can be promoted. 바카라And if it바카라s a wild banana, a seeded one, we can identify the gene and extract it.바카라 Developing a new, fortified banana will take time.
"It바카라s a manageable disease," says agricultural scientist Vasanth Kumar Thimakapura . He speaks from experience, having tackled Fusarium wilt in the Nanjangud Rasabale, a variety of banana that takes its name from Nanjangud town near Mysore. " The disease is a big problem in the area. It바카라s difficult to manage once it comes in," he says. The disease can also spread through the air, a worrying thought.
Mainly, the disease spreads through the suckers, the lateral shoot responsible for propagation. 바카라That can carry the inoculum. It can also move through irrigation water,바카라 he says, adding that farmers have to follow an integrated management practice to treat the disease. 바카라We have to understand the disease mechanism and also the host, the plant. When the old roots are infected, only then do you see the symptoms. By that time, most of the root has been damaged. So, if you treat with a fungicide, it only kills the pathogen바카라the plant will not survive because the roots are dead,바카라 he says. A treatment mechanism must ensure the plant will produce new roots. 바카라On one side, you have to kill the pathogen and on the other, the plant has to overcome the damage,바카라 he says.
There is also the question of the 바카라wilt-proof바카라 GM variety of Cavendish, with a culture being cultivated in Australia. 바카라Bringing in GM banana will not be easy, policy-wise too. Anyway, we have traditional bananas that have this gene,바카라 says the NRCB scientist.
A solution to what The Guardian called 바카라Bananageddon바카라 in a piece earlier this year can only come through a mix of awareness, research and application. Crop rotation is said to have been effective in China, and more vegetated ground cover, enabling greater diversity, is also said to provide resistance. Scientists in Taiwan are working towards bringing in a resistant culture. As of now, though, there바카라s an elephant in the room: that animal바카라s favourite fruit is in danger.
***
- Fusarium wilt had caused losses of around $2.3 billion by the time it wiped out the Gros Michel in the 1950s.
- The original strain, TR1, is affecting south India, while the spread of the newer TR4 is causing global concern.
***
Scourge Under The Skin
- TR4 is a strain of Fusarium wilt, a fungal disease which wiped out the earlier international standard banana, the Gros Michel, in the 1950s
- It is currently threatening the Gros Michel바카라s successor, the Cavendish, across the globe
- The disease gets in through the root, causing a blockade in the ability of the banana plant to send water and nutrients upwards
- It eats away at the bottom and the older leaves tend to wilt and fall off
- Researchers say it stays in the soil for about 30 years
By Siddhartha Mishra in Faizabad and Barabanki with Ajay Sukumaran in Bangalore