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Issue 397

Front Page

News Headlines

Delegation After Delegation Of Foreign Diplomats Visit Somaliland

School Exams Results To Be Released This Month

Counterfeiters Busted In Somaliland

Berbera Port Manager Blames Captain And Crew Of M/V Mariam Star

Sheikh Sharif Uses Piracy To Fill His Pockets

Egypt Caves In To Pirates

Las Anod Building Its Biggest Mosque

Former Election Commission Member Passes Away

Local and Regional Affairs

SRSG Welcomes UNPOS Visit To Somaliland

Urgent Food Aid Needed To Avert Humanitarian Catastrophe In Somalia – UN

Arab League Demands More Troops For Somalia

Clear And Present Danger From Somalia

Second Round Of Child Health Days Aims To Boost Child Survival In Somalia

Al Qaeda-Linked American Terrorist Unveiled, As Charges Await Him In U.S.

US To Base Drones In Seychelles To Fight Piracy

Somaliland Presidential Guardsman Made “Death Threats” Against Lawmakers

Millions Face Starvation In E. African Drought

Italy Sends Boatload Of 75 Migrants Back To Libya: Report

AU Tackles Darfur, Somalia

Al-Shabab Leader Threatens Somaliland

Ethiopia: Two Journalists Get One-Year Jail Terms Under Obsolete Law

Why Somalia Is The Worst Place In The World

Livestock May Do Better Than Crops, Amidst The Worsening Climate Change

The Public Resists Capitulation In The Face Of Arrests, Intimidation

Editorial

Somaliland’s Foreign Policy Still Active Despite Internal Disputes

Features & Commentary

Somaliland's Perplexing Limbo

Where Does Africa Foreign Aid Really Go: Africa Or Elsewhere?

Another Banner Pirate Season

Ethiopia - Conditional Union Of Independent Nations

Analysis: Who Is Fighting Whom In Somalia

Gaddafi's Forty Years In Power Celebrated With A 'Gallery Of Grotesques'

Will Dinosaurs Learn To Swim?

Minnesota: Creating A Safe Space For Young Muslims

What’s Good For The Nyoro Goose Is Good For The Ganda Gander

Report Of The Au Chairperson On The Tripoli Special Session (Summit)

International News

War Is Justified And Can Be Won, Brown Insists

Five Killed As Police Face Syringe Protesters In Chinese City

Study Criticizes Laptops For Distracting Children In Developing Countries

Afghan Officials Say NATO-Led Airstrike Killed Mostly Civilians

Scientists Develop Easy Ways To Spot Banana Disease

Opinion

Midnight Forever – Part III: The conclusion

Africa’s Curse Descends On Somaliland

Somaliland; Trouble Times: Is There A Solution?

An Open Letter To Somaliland All-Party Parliamentary Group

A Constitutional Solution To The Political Crisis In Somaliland

Ethiopia Backs Somaliland President Dahir Riyale Kahin

Losing The Faith In The System

Somaliland Bashers: Clean Up Your Mess

Scientists Develop Easy Ways To Spot Banana Disease

OCHIENG’ OGOBO & CHRISTINA

Scientists have developed improved methods for identifying a bacterium devastating banana crops in East Africa, where the fruit is a staple part of the diet and an important part of the rural economy.
Their research was published in the journal Plant Disease last month last month.

Until now, banana Xanthomonas wilt (BXW) virus was diagnosed by symptoms alone. These include a progressive yellowing and wilting of leaves, premature ripening of fruit, brown discoloration of fruit and pale yellow ooze coming from cut surfaces, said Leena Tripathi, the study’s lead author.

The research team, tried a variety of biochemical tests to identify the virus in the laboratory. Tests that amplify and identify the pathogen’s DNA were “most reliable, as the infected plants can be tested even before the symptoms develop”, says Tripathi, a biotechnologist at the IITA in Uganda.

Tripathi says the team has also developed a method for effectively growing the BXW bacterium in the laboratory. Using conventional techniques, the bacterium grows slowly and can be overcome by other bacteria or fungi. The new method uses a specific growth medium on which the BXW pathogen grows easily. Tripathi says the researchers are also testing genetically-modified bananas inserted with a single disease-resistant gene from sweet peppers to resist the disease (see GM bananas to fight wilt in Africa).

The virus first reported in Uganda in 2001, has since spread to Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Rwanda and Tanzania, according to Ranajit Bandyopadhyay from the IITA in Ibadan, Nigeria. It is spread by insects, wind-driven rainfall, infected planting materials and contaminated planting tools.

“But the disease can be contained through using tissue cultures and plant material which is free of infection, disinfecting farm tools and early removal of male flowers because insects spread this disease through male flowers so they are an entry point for infection,’’ says co-author Maina Mwangi, from IITA in Uganda. 

The study stands to educate researchers as well as farmers on ways to detect the disease and avoid its spread,” according to researchers

SciDev.net





 














 

 


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