Los Baños, The Philippines
June 11, 2006
By Rudy A. Fernandez,
The Philippine STAR via
SEAMEO-SEARCA
Los Baños White Gold. Sultan cassava. Biyaya peanut. Tiwala
soybean. "Sexy" tomato. Sinta papaya. Pag-asa mungbean. NSIC sp
(sweet potato). SNAP hydroponics. Modified atmosphere packaging
for perishable food crops (MAPP). Eye-pleasing hybrid ornamental
plants.
The list lengthens as more high-yielding and disease-resistant
food and industrial crops, and viable agricultural technologies
are in the pipeline.
As the
U.P. Los Baños-Institute of Plant Breeding (UPLB-IPB)
observed its 31st anniversary last June 5, it looked back to the
past three decades with pride and accomplishment.
No less than Agriculture Secretary Domingo F. Panganiban
acknowledged in his anniversary speech: "IPB is one of the
country's major springwells from which we draw modern crop
varieties and technologies that provide Filipino farmers
increased harvests and incomes."
Panganiban, himself a proud UPLB alumnus, also reported that
since 2001, the Arroyo administration, through DA-particularly
its Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR), Philippine Coconut
Authority (PCA), and Philippine Rice Research Institute
(PhilRice) - has funded 24 research projects and studies.
Dr. Jose Hernandez, new IPB director, reported the following
institute accomplishments in plant breeding: "A total of 126
varieties of 33 crops, including 17 varieties of cassava, and 56
varieties of vegetables were approved for release by the
National Seed Industry Council (NSIC) and IPB Germplasm
Registration and Release Office."
Dr. Hernandez added that many of these varieties are being
planted by farmers and seed growers nationwide and used in
national programs for increased crop production.
At present, he added, IPB maintains more than 45,000 accessions
of about 500 species of crops and related species.
The IBP-bred food and industrial crops have been acknowledged
for their significant contribution to Philippine agriculture.
Los Baños White Gold (IPB 2006), for instance, is a three-way
cross corn hybrid that has an average yield of 6.44 tons per
hectare (or almost three times the national average yield of 2.4
t/ha), has 81.25 percent shelling recovery, and matures in 104
days.
Also now in farmers' fields are the all-purpose type cassava
variety Lakan 1, the industrial-purpose cassava varieties Sultan
1 and Sultan 7, and the sweet potato varieties UPL Sp-14, NSIC
Sp-28, and NSIC Sp-29.
Biyaya-14 and Pn 10 are high-yielding Valencia and Spanish- type
peanuts while Tiwala 6, Tiwala 8, and Tiwala 10 are
high-yielding soybean varieties adapted to tropical
environments.
Now popular among fruit growers is the Sinta, the country's
first hybrid papaya variety developed by former IPB director Dr.
Violeta Villegas.
While members of the science community are vaunted for their
"serious façade," they also do not forget to make people
smile-as when the IPB plant breeders named four tomato varieties
they developed after four sexy and talented movie actresses-Rica
(Peralejo), Ara (Mina), Rosanna, and Assunta.
These high-yielding hybrid and open-pollinated tomatoes have
been "making waves" among farmers in places where they have been
planted.
Outstanding IPB-generated technologies include the Simple
Nutrient Adoption Program (SNAP) hydroponics and the modified
atmosphere packaging for perishables (MAPP) technology.
SNAP hydroponics ("water-less" plant growing) is a low-cost
system suited for household level and small-scale commercial
vegetable production, ideal for small spaces (as in urban
areas), uses recyclable materials, and runs without
electricity.
The MAPP technology slows down deterioration and extends storage
life of horticultural crops. It is suitable for banana, papaya,
tomato, sweet pea, broccoli, calamansi, lanzones, and orchid.
For more information about the UPLB-IPB-developed crops and
technologies, write/call Director Jose Hernandez. |