June 12, 2005
By Rudy A. Fernandez
The Philippine STAR via
SEARCA BIC
Pagasa. 911. Sinta. Maria Makiling. Celeb rity Stars.
No, we are not writing about the weather. Or rescue operations,
much more terrorism. Neither are we dealing with love. Or
fairies, enchantresses, and beautiful people.
The words cited are but among the 126 superior varieties of 33
crops bred over he past three decades by the
University of the Philippines
Los Baños - Institute of Plant Breeding (UPLB-IPB). During
the period, IPB also registered 72 crops, mostly vegetables,
fruit trees, and ornamentals, with the IPB Germplasm
Registration and Release Office (GRRO).
These significant accomplishments of the institute were
highlighted last June 3 at a program marking the celebration of
IPB's 30th anniversary.
As IPB's current director, Dr. Desiree Hautea, said: "The
institute in its 30 years of glory has developed and bred
outstanding varieties of major agricultural crops such as corn,
peanut, mungbean, sweet potato, cassava, tomato, eggpalnt,
papaya, and many others. During this special day we will
recognize the contributions of our scientists and the varieties
that they have developed which has brought fame and honor to the
institute."
The Pagasa Series of 12 mungbean varieties, bred by scientists
led by IPB's second director, Dr. Ricardo Lantican, are now
widely grown in the Philippines and in other neighboring
countries. These were also used as parental sources in Taiwan
and South Korea.
The many IPB crop varieties can be aptly called products of the
scientists "labor of love".
A remarkable example is Sinta, the first Philippine papaya
hybrid with moderate tolerance to the dread papaya ringspot
virus (PRSV), which has decimated papaya farms in Luzon and
Visayas over the past two decades.
Bred by IPB researchers led by the institute's seventh director,
Dr. Violeta Villegas, Sinta is now reviving the country's papaya
industry from the ravages of PRSV.
Maria Makiling is the creamy white variety of Mussaen das
(ornamental plants), whose beeding was initiated in
collaboration with the UPLB College of Agriculture-Department of
Horticulture.
Diwata is the pure white Mussaenda released together with
Lakambini (red and pink), Paraluman (rose and pink), and Ming
Ramos (named after the former First Lady).
Celebrity Stars are Hibiscus (gumamela) hybrids named after
movie superstars. Other IPB-bred gumamela now immortalize
Filipino heroines in the revolution and Filipino women of
science and the arts.
The other crops bred by IPB have also been interestingly named.
- DLU Pearl Sweet, named
after the late National Scientist and UPLB-CA dean Dr.
Dioscoro L. Umali, is the country's first double mutant corn
variety with excellent eating quality. It is now grown in 15
provinces.
- EQJ White, the first white
full-season three-way cross hybrid, was christened after Dr.
Emil Q. Javier, IPB's founding director who later became
UPLB chancellor an UP president.
- Tiwala 6 is the most
widely planted soybean in Cagayan Valley and still
unsurpassed in performance. Tiwala 10 is recommended for
Mindanao.
- Biyaya is the tag name of
peanut varieties that are high-yielding and resistant to
peanut pests and diseases and acceptable as boiling type
groundnut.
- Ara and Assunta (remember
those sexy movie stars?) are the first tomato hybrids while
Rica and Rosanna (again, those voluptuous actresses) are
also high-yielding open-pollinated varieties.
These are but among the prolific,
good-quality, and sturdy varieties that are now widely planted
by Filipino and other Southeast Asian farmers.
By the way, others who had served as IPB director included R.
Ruben Villareal, Dr. Eufemio Rasco Jr., and Dr. Randy Hautea.
Summing up, IPB has impacted national and international programs
in agriculture, contributing to the economy, nutrition, and food
security of nations. |