Team:Wageningen UR/overview/background
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<h1>Background</h1> | <h1>Background</h1> | ||
- | <p> Can you imagine a world without bananas? The banana fruits that we enjoy here in Europe is the Cavendish cultivar (Figure 1). Today this banana is the main export banana worldwide but back in the 1950s the banana export was depended on the Gros Michel cultivar. However, this species was largely eradicated by the race 1 strain of Panama disease that is caused by <i>Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense</i> a soil-borne fungus [1, 2]. Back in the 1950s 40,000 ha of banana plantations became unproductive for banana production in a period of just 50 years [3]. As commercially grown bananas are largely sterile clones with a triploid genome, traditional breeding techniques have proven inadequate to develop resistant cultivars [4].</p> | + | <table style="width:100%"> |
+ | <td> | ||
+ | <p> Can you imagine a world without bananas? The banana fruits that we enjoy here in Europe is the Cavendish cultivar (Figure 1). Today this banana is the main export banana worldwide but back in the 1950s the banana export was depended on the Gros Michel cultivar. However, this species was largely eradicated by the race 1 strain of Panama disease that is caused by <i>Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense</i> a soil-borne fungus [1, 2]. Back in the 1950s 40,000 ha of banana plantations became unproductive for banana production in a period of just 50 years [3]. As commercially grown bananas are largely sterile clones with a triploid genome, traditional breeding techniques have proven inadequate to develop resistant cultivars [4].</p></td> | ||
- | <figure> | + | <td><figure> |
<img src=" https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/6/60/Wageningen_UR_marlene_bananas.JPG " align="top" /width="40%"> | <img src=" https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/6/60/Wageningen_UR_marlene_bananas.JPG " align="top" /width="40%"> | ||
<figcaption> Figure 1. The Cavendish cultivar with premature fruits. This cultivar is the primary banana species for export. </figcaption> | <figcaption> Figure 1. The Cavendish cultivar with premature fruits. This cultivar is the primary banana species for export. </figcaption> | ||
- | </figure> | + | </figure></td> |
<p> Back in the 1950s the resistant Cavendish cultivar was identified just in time, replacing Gros Michel as the primary banana species for export [1]. In 1992 a new variant of <i>F.oxysporum</i>, tropical race 4 (TR4) was discovered in Sumatra and peninsular Malaysia in Cavendish plantations. Levels have since been seen to rise and to spread throughout the world [5] (Figure 2). In 2013 the presence of race 4 was announced in Jordan, leaving only 20% of the Jordan Valley production area disease free. The biggest banana exporting counties located in Latin America, the Caribbean or West Africa are yet to be affected by this destructive disease but the rapid expansion draws a grim picture for the future of the banana [2, 6]. </p> | <p> Back in the 1950s the resistant Cavendish cultivar was identified just in time, replacing Gros Michel as the primary banana species for export [1]. In 1992 a new variant of <i>F.oxysporum</i>, tropical race 4 (TR4) was discovered in Sumatra and peninsular Malaysia in Cavendish plantations. Levels have since been seen to rise and to spread throughout the world [5] (Figure 2). In 2013 the presence of race 4 was announced in Jordan, leaving only 20% of the Jordan Valley production area disease free. The biggest banana exporting counties located in Latin America, the Caribbean or West Africa are yet to be affected by this destructive disease but the rapid expansion draws a grim picture for the future of the banana [2, 6]. </p> |
Revision as of 20:18, 17 October 2014
Background
Can you imagine a world without bananas? The banana fruits that we enjoy here in Europe is the Cavendish cultivar (Figure 1). Today this banana is the main export banana worldwide but back in the 1950s the banana export was depended on the Gros Michel cultivar. However, this species was largely eradicated by the race 1 strain of Panama disease that is caused by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense a soil-borne fungus [1, 2]. Back in the 1950s 40,000 ha of banana plantations became unproductive for banana production in a period of just 50 years [3]. As commercially grown bananas are largely sterile clones with a triploid genome, traditional breeding techniques have proven inadequate to develop resistant cultivars [4]. |