For Immediate Release
Contact:
John M. Martino
Phone Number: (215) 895-1186
Date: 01/30/03
Could
the Banana Slip out of Existence Forever?
-- A University
of the Sciences in Philadelphia Health Tip --
The
next time you order a banana split or sip on a banana daiquiri
by the poolside, make sure you savor the sweet taste of the
popular yellow fruit, because it may go the path of the mighty
dinosaurs – extinction. That’s right, the crescent-shaped
fruit, which is one of the largest agricultural products in
the world, is in for the fight of its life against a plague
of pests and diseases. The banana’s biggest foe is Black
Sigatoka, a fungal disease that affects the fruit’s
all-important leaf area, causing premature ripening and reducing
the productive life of the banana. Huge banana plantations
all over the world would feel the impact if the banana slipped
off the face of the Earth.
Dr.
James Pierce, associate professor of genetics and biotechnology
at University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, says the banana
is unlike most other native or wild fruits, and this uniqueness
is at the root of the problem. The type of banana to which
we are accustomed – big, yellow, sweet and seedless
– is different than wild bananas, which are smaller,
have seeds and not much fruit. The bananas that we see in
the supermarket are generated from a single cultivar that
is generated from two different species that are joined together,
called a hybrid. According to Dr. Pierce, one of the banana’s
distinctions among fruits is the fact that it is a triploid,
instead of a diploid, meaning that they have three sets of
chromosomes, instead of two as most other fruits have. This
is where the problem lies.
“Because
the bananas we eat are triploids, they can only be grown,
not through sexual reproduction, but asexually,” says
Dr. Pierce. “Since bananas are sterile, they are basically
cloned and are bred to be these beautiful yellow fruits that
are sweet, have no seeds and last very long. There is no variety
since there is no sexual reproduction. Bananas have the same
genotype or genes, and are essentially identical clones.”
So
is the banana as we know it doomed? Some researchers claim
the delicious, yellow fruit could become extinct within the
next 10 years. Dr. Pierce says the amount of money and pesticides
needed to preserve the banana against the Black Sigatoka is
growing. “Plants have to use lots of fungicides because
this fungus, like many microorganisms, is becoming resistant
to the chemicals’ effects,” he says.
Dr.
Pierce believes the answer may be two words that many consumers
are nervous to associate with their food – genetic engineering.
He says scientists and researchers will need to develop measures
via genetics to help the banana against disease and pests.
If not, it could be devastating to consumers, particularly
in third-world countries, who rely so heavily on its nutrition
and abundance.
“This
is a genetic problem,” says Dr. Pierce. “Hopefully,
there are biotech companies that are looking to tinker the
genetic information of bananas to help us grow new genotypes
that are resistant to the parasite, but still contain the
same characteristics in the bananas that are in supermarkets
and in our kitchens.
“There’s
been a big backlash over genetically modifying foods,”
adds Dr. Pierce, “but what will people do if there are
no more bananas and the only way to save them is through genetic
engineering? That is the question everyone may have to answer.”
To
arrange an interview with Dr. Pierce, contact John M. Martino
at (215) 895-1186.
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