The Origins of Corn & Bananas

Although we must be optimistic that the need take them to other type of food (meat), and carry it out.

If they could afford meat they would not eat bananas in first place so it is likely they would starve if they do not replace it with something more sustainable which they probably do not have in first place because banana is unique in that question.
 
Corvinus said:
Although we must be optimistic that the need take them to other type of food (meat), and carry it out.

If they could afford meat they would not eat bananas in first place so it is likely they would starve if they do not replace it with something more sustainable which they probably do not have in first place because banana is unique in that question.
Yes, you're right, Corvinus. It was wishful thinking on my part.
 
H-kqge said:
Could this be a case of "time's up" for the banana?

_http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2525127/Worlds-banana-supply-risk-bugs-spread-fungal-disease.html

World’s banana supply at risk from increasing number of bugs and spread of fungal disease

'National emergency' declared in Costa Rica, one of the biggest suppliers

Country produces 1.2 million tons of bananas each year - one in five could be ruined by plagues of mealybugs and scale insects

Elsewhere, banana-eating fungus from Asia and Australia is spreading

By WILLIAM TURVILL
PUBLISHED: 11:30, 17 December 2013 | UPDATED: 11:44, 17 December 2013

Plagues of insects and a spreading fungus are threatening the world's supply of bananas, researchers have warned.

A state of 'national emergency' has been declared in Costa Rica, one of the world's biggest suppliers, while separately a banana-eating fungus from Asia is believed to be spreading.

Officials in the Central American country of Costa Rica fear that one in five bananas could have been ruined by insects this year. The country last year supplied 1.2 million tons of the fruit worldwide.

The director of the country’s agriculture ministry’s State Phytosanitary Services (SFE), Magda Gonzalez, told the Tico Times the rising number of mealybugs and scale insects on the country’s Atlantic coast regions can be explained by rising temperatures along with changing rain patterns.
She said these conditions could shorten the insects’ reproduction cycle by one third.
‘I can tell you with near certainty that climate change is behind these pests,’ she told the paper.


SFE has estimated that the pests have affected around 24,000 hectares of banana field in the Central American country.
Last year, Costa Rica exported more than 1.2 million tons of bananas, valued at more than $815 million, or around £500 million.



WORLD'S MOST POPULAR FRUIT
The banana is thought to be the world’s most popular fruit, with people spending more than £10 billion on them every year.

Having originated in Asia, they have been cultivated for more than 4,000 years.

They are available all year round, and harvested every day of the year.

The average price of bananas in the UK dropped from £1.08 per kilogram in 1997 to as low as 50p in 2008, according to Fairtrade.

Elsewhere, the Scientific American has published a report warning of a variant of banana-eating fungus which, after originating in Asia in the 1990s, is threatening other plantations across the globe.The disease, believed to have been caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp.cubense (Foc), is believed to have spread after being located in Jordan and Mozambique.

The journal suggests the fungus may have arrived in the new countries by being passed on by migrant workers or the import of infected stems.
The pathogen, Foc-TR4, can affect the Cavendish cultivar bananas, which account for almost all bananas in the trade, particularly badly.

Previously, a strain of Foc wiped out the Gros Michel cultivar, which was the most popular banana export type between the 1800s and the 1950s.

Rony Swennen, a breeder at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, said it was a ‘gigantic problem’.
Co-author of the report Gert Kema predicted the strain could spread to Latin America – which, along with the Carribbean, is where 80 per cent of the world’s supply of bananas originate.
The Fusarium researcher at Wageningen University and Research Centre in the Netherlands said: ‘I’m incredibly concerned.’

Here's the report by The Scientific American linked in the article:

Banana Fungus Creeps Closer to World's Key Plantations
Fears rise for Latin American industry as devastating disease hits leading variety in Africa and Middle East

A variant of a fungus that rots and kills the main variety of export banana has been found in plantations in Mozambique and Jordan, raising fears that it could spread to major producers and decimate supplies. The pathogen, which was until now limited to parts of Asia and a region of Australia, has a particularly devastating effect on the popular Cavendish cultivar, which accounts for almost all of the multibillion-dollar banana export trade. Expansion of the disease worldwide could be disastrous, say researchers.

The disease is caused by strains of a soil fungus called Fusarium oxysporum f. sp.cubense (Foc). A strain of Foc previously wiped out the Gros Michel cultivar, which was the main exported banana variety from the nineteenth century until the 1950s. In response, the industry replaced Gros Michel plants with the Cavendish variety, which is resistant to that Foc strain. But Cavendish is susceptible to the new Foc Tropical Race 4 (Foc-TR4) strain, and could meet the same fate as Gros Michel if the fungus reaches Latin America, the world’s leading banana exporter, says Rony Swennen of the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, and a banana breeder at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Dar es Salaam. “It’s a gigantic problem,” he adds. Although Foc strains spread slowly, they are almost impossible to eliminate from soil.

Foc-TR4 was first detected in Asia in the 1990s, and is now found in Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, China and northern Australia (see "Fruit threat"). The outbreak in Jordan, reported on October 29 (F. A. Garcia et al. Plant Dis. _http://doi.org/qd3; 2013), was the first to be described outside those nations. The Mozambique outbreak was reported last month.

Nobody is sure how the fungus arrived in Jordan or Mozambique. Migrant workers from Asia might inadvertently have brought contaminated soil with them. Another possibility is the import of infected rhizomes—the stems from which banana plants propagate. But much of the Cavendish industry now uses tissue culture, which produces pathogen-free plantlets.

Gert Kema, a Fusarium researcher at Wageningen University and Research Centre in the Netherlands and co-author of the Jordan report, believes that further spread is inevitable. “I’m incredibly concerned,” he says. “I will not be surprised if it pops up in Latin America in the near future.” That region, along with the Caribbean, accounts for more than 80 percent of banana exports. If Foc-TR4 takes root there, it could lead to the slow demise of industrial farming of the Cavendish variety. To slow the spread, good farm hygiene, and prompt quarantine and destruction of infected plants are crucial. Altus Viljoen, a researcher at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, was called in to identify the cause of the Mozambique outbreak, and says that authorities were quick to take action. He estimates that the disease has been present for two to three years.

Smaller farms in Asia are already trying to mitigate losses. Tissue culture of Cavendish plants has generated variants with random mutations that confer partial resistance to Foc-TR4. Planting of these variants, in combination with measures such as crop rotation, has allowed the cultivation of bananas on contaminated land. But production losses and higher costs make affected plantations less economically viable.

Progress in creating bananas fully resistant to Foc-TR4, either by classical breeding or genetic engineering, has so far been limited. The wild Asian banana Musa acuminata malaccensis—the genome of which was published last year (A. D’Hont Nature 488, 213–217; 2012)—seems to be resistant, and researchers are experimenting with putting its resistance genes into the Cavendish. The resulting transgenic specimens have been in field trials for 18 months on contaminated ground in Australia, and are looking “very promising”, says James Dale, director of the Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities at Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia. But he cautions that the full results are not yet in.

So this "humble fruit" rose up against fantastic odds, propagated across the globe in tandem with the ascendancy of homo sapiens & is now on the brink of extinction. So what does the homo sapien do? Why, tamper with its genes of course! To quote one of the comments at the bottom: "hell no, GMO!"
 
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