Corn harvests on experimental plots and in
farmers' fields in four East and Southern African countries have
yielded striking results in long-term trials of an innovative
witchweed-fighting technology developed by a
Weizmann Institute of
Science scientist in collaboration with researchers at
The International Maize and
Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT). The new technology
will be presented to seed producers, government representatives,
regional scientists and regulatory agencies at a
CIMMYT-sponsored meeting in Kisumu, Kenya on July 4--6, 2002.
The meeting, entitled 'A Herbicide-Resistant Maize Method for
Striga Control: A Meeting to Explore the Commercial
Possibilities,' will demonstrate the results of the new
technology in the field, present the current status of this
herbicide-resistant maize technology, assess its commercial and
regulatory aspects, and evaluate its future. The meeting is
designed to expose interested parties in the public and private
sectors to a powerful new weapon that could dramatically
alleviate the Striga scourge.
At the UN-sponsored World Food Summit in Rome (June 10-13),
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan stated that 'as many as 24,000
people a day die' of starvation around the world. This
devastation is substantially concentrated in Africa. A major
contributor to the problem is Striga hermonthica, or witchweed,
a parasitic weed that ravages grain crops in several parts of
the world-particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where the weed
infests approximately 20--40 million hectares of farmland
cultivated by poor farmers and is responsible for lost yields
valued at approximately $1 billion annually. An estimated 100
million farmers lose from 20% to 80% of their yields to this
parasite. In Kenya alone it severely infests 150,000 hectares of
land (76% of the farmland in Western Kenya), causing an
estimated annual crop loss valued at $38 million.
The weed thrives by attaching itself, hypodermic-like, to the
roots of a suitable host crop. It sends up a signal that says
'feed me,' and not only sucks up the crop's energy but also
competes for much of its nutrients and water, while poisoning
the crop with toxins and stunting its growth.
Until now, other methods to control this parasitic weed have
been long-term and often impractical and, hence, have not been
widely adopted by farmers. African farmers commonly remove the
witchweed by hand, but by the time it emerges above-ground, it
has already drained the crop and done its damage. Herbicides,
applied during that same post-emergence period, are also
ineffective for the same reason.
Prof. Jonathan Gressel of the Weizmann Institute's Department
of Plant Sciences proposed an innovative solution to the
parasitic weed problem that relies on a new use for a certain
type of corn that was developed, using biotechnology, in the
United States. The corn carries a mutant gene that confers
resistance to a specific herbicide, leaving the corn plant
unharmed when treated with this herbicide. As an alternative to
spraying entire fields, Prof. Gressel suggested that
herbicide-resistant seeds be coated with the herbicide before
planting. Once the crop's plants sprout from the seeds, the
parasites unwittingly devour the weed-killing chemical from the
crop roots or surrounding soil and die. By the time a crop
ripens, the herbicide, applied in this way at less than 1/10th
the normal rate, has disappeared, leaving the food product
unaffected. Dr. Fred Kanampiu, a CIMMYT scientist based in
Kenya, has tested this approach for more than ten crop seasons
while CIMMYT breeders crossed the gene into African corn to
produce high-yielding varieties that are resistant to major
African diseases, as well as to the herbicide. Witchweed was
virtually eliminated in plots planted with herbicide-coated
seeds, as will be shown at the Kisumu meeting. The experiments
indicate that a low-dose herbicide seed coating on resistant
corn can increase yields up to four-fold in fields highly
infested with witchweed. The herbicide is coated on the seed
together with the fungicide-insecticide mix that is normally
used in Africa to provide healthy plants. With this technology
the farmer does not have to purchase spray equipment and can
continue interplanting legumes between the corn plants -- a
common practice among smallholder African farmers.
Prof. Gressel is the incumbent of the Gilbert de Botton Chair
of Plant Sciences
This research was supported in part by the Canadian
International Development Agency (CIDA) through the CIMMYT East
Africa Cereals Program and by the Rockefeller Foundation.
Initial herbicide-resistant corn seeds for breeding into CIMMYT
varieties were provided by Pioneer International, USA.
Donor Support: Mr. David M. Safer, San Francisco, CA., Levine
Institute of Applied Science.
The Weizmann Institute of Science is a major
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students and support staff are engaged in more than 1,000
research projects across the spectrum of contemporary science.