Tags:
Reminds me of an experiment we were lectured on as students - In the experiment, a colony of rats were given all they needed except space. The inevitible result was always death. As soon as space is reduced (in the banana's case a sad effect of monocropping in large areas) pathogens can and will cause catastrophic declines. In the rats' case, stress, disease and fighting was also a serious problem, even with abundant food. Sound familiar? Technically though, This is a bit of an over statement. Such an outbreak can decimate an industry, but with a bit of planning the total loss of every banana plant in existance can easily be avoided. Same principle as to how plants survived ice ages in refugia. Not as if the whole planet turned to ice and then thawed with no plant in sight.
Still, I need to get a few of our local variety going here now that the drought is over.........we go through a couple of bunches a week over here
Interesting story about the rats Kobus. You don't mind if I use that one sometime.
Farming methods are definately to blame. If you put out an all you can eat buffet for a pest or pathogen of course it is going to breed and spread. Couple that with the density of plant spacing in banana plantations and you have a dank environment for fungal diseases to proliferate.
The problem here in the States is as soon as it hits our shores, the USDA will probably mandate that private individuals have to destroy all their plants in order to protect the banana growing industry. Who knows?
Interesting story about the rats Kobus. You don't mind if I use that one sometime.
Farming methods are definately to blame. If you put out an all you can eat buffet for a pest or pathogen of course it is going to breed and spread. Couple that with the density of plant spacing in banana plantations and you have a dank environment for fungal diseases to proliferate.
The problem here in the States is as soon as it hits our shores, the USDA will probably mandate that private individuals have to destroy all their plants in order to protect the banana growing industry. Who knows?
The problem around here is when there is some sort of plant "disease" the professional growers sometimes try to push the government to destroy the private holdings and dooryard crops I guess because they see people growing their own as competition. Happens around here with citrus and even with some diseases that don't render the crop unusable but just not as pretty.
Growing bananas at home is also a good thing since commercial grown bananas are some of the most heavily sprayed crops but here on the mainland USA there are very few places that bananas grow all that well (as in there are only a few very small zones in the continental USA where freezes don't happen most winters) so I don't expect much impact on dooryard bananas here.
© 2024 Created by Sylvia Bernstein. Powered by