Welcome to SJGLE.com! |Register for free|log in
Welcome to SJGLE.com! |Register for free|log in
Related Searches: Tea Vitamin Nutrients Ingredients paper cup packing
They are the world’s most popular fruit – a staple of breakfasts, packed lunches and healthy snacks in kitchens everywher.But now a virulent disease is threatening to wreak havoc on banana crops worldwide and maybe even kill them off. A fungus known as "fusarium wilt" is laying waste to banana plantations across the world and now it has reached our shores.
Dr Rachel Warmington from The Eden Project in Cornwall, which showcases plants from many diverse climates, told ITV News their biomes (biological communities which share a climate) are now home to one of the least attractive things that grows in this environment.
"We were really surprised when we found that we had fusarium wilt in our banana exhibit, but it has enabled us to get involved in research about the disease. The banana goes completely yellow, wilts and collapses so poses a massive threat."
Bananas fuel whole economies worldwide: they are the biggest export of Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama and Belize and the second most valuable export for Colombia, Guatemala and Honduras. Presently there is no known cure for the fungus.
"Its causing devastation in banana plantations because once a plantation has it, they cant treat it and a lot of these countries rely on them because its their livelihood, for them its their main export product," she added.
However, there may still be hope for Britains favourite fruit as scientists at The Eden Project are trialling possible cures for this fatal fungus.
So far it has not yet reached the Caribbean or Latin America, wher most of the UKs banana supplies come from, but Britain is now on the front line of the fight to beat the fungus.
E-newsletter
Tags
Latest News