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AS IT IS 2016-04-24 Disease Threatens World Banana Supplies 疾病威胁世界香蕉供应
A disease called “Panama” is threatening supplies of the world’s most popular fruit – banana.
Two years ago, the United Nations warned that the “Panama disease” could destroy “much of the world’s banana crop.”
Since then, things have not gotten better. A new outbreak was discovered last year in Australia. The disease started in Asia in the 1990s, and later spread to Africa and the Middle East.
World health officials worry the disease could travel to Latin America, one of the top banana producers in the world.
All this is a big concern because bananas are an important source of income and nutrients1 for millions of people. They are grown in 135 tropical nations.
The United Nations lists bananas as one of the most important foods, along with rice, wheat and corn. In 2011, farmers produced 107 metric tons, the UN said.
The website ultimatesuperfoods.org says bananas also contain serotonin, which it says makes people feel happy.
“No matter who you are, you’ll enjoy the calming effects and positive vibes,” the website says of the banana.
Concern in the banana industry
Randy Ploetz is a professor at the Tropical Research & Educational Center at the University of Florida. Many consider him as America’s top banana expert, or, “top banana.”
As he explained, Panama disease affects the Cavendish banana. The Cavendish is one of more than 500 kinds of bananas. But it is the most popular.
“The industry is waking up to the problem,” Ploetz said. “They are pretty scared.”
He was speaking Thursday by telephone from Miami, Florida, where he is among 1,000 people attending the International Banana Congress.
The meeting was supposed to take place in Costa Rica, but was moved at the last minute. There were concerns banana growers could spread Panama disease from dirt collected on their shoes, Ploetz said.
Ploetz said reports Cavendish banana production could end are not correct. But if the disease spreads to Latin America, it could hurt the world’s economy along with food supplies for millions of people.
Still, he said there is reason for hope. Scientists in Australia are working on a genetically2 engineered banana that might not be at risk of getting Panama disease. But Ploetz wondered if people are ready to accept genetically engineered bananas.
Robert Bertram is chief scientist for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). He said bananas are important to many millions of people all over the world.
“In Africa, Asia and tropical America, bananas and plantains are an important food source for more than 100 million people,” he told VOA.
“As a cash crop, bananas are sold in local, regional and international markets,” Bertram said. Banana exports provide jobs and foreign money that producing countries need, he said.
Bertram said USAID is organizing a worldwide effort to stop the growth of Panama disease.
A fungus3, known as TR4, causes the Panama disease.
Before 2013, Bertram said, it was limited to Asia – China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Taiwan. Since then, it spread to the Middle East – Jordan, Lebanon, Oman and Pakistan and to Africa, in Mozambique.
In the 1960s, the same fungus wiped out the ‘Gros Michel’ banana crop, which at the time was the world’s most popular. The Cavendish replaced it.
John McQuaid, author of “Tasty: The Art and Science of What We Eat” said some people think the Gros Michels “tasted better.”
At Wageningen University in the Netherlands, researchers are looking for Cavendish replacements5. Their work is difficult. Researchers said a replacement4 will have to resist Panama disease, and survive the shipping6 time needed to get bananas to stores thousands of miles away from banana fields.
Words in This Story
banana – n. a long curved fruit with a thick peel that is yellow when it is ripe
outbreak – n. a sudden start or increase of a disease
serotonin -- n. a compound present in blood
vibes – n. feelings
top banana – n. the top person in a field
plantains – n. a greenish fruit that comes from a kind of banana plant and is eaten after it has been cooked
fungus – n. any one of a group of related plants, such as molds, mushrooms, or yeasts7, that live on dead or decaying8 things
replacement – n. the act of replacing something
1 nutrients | |
n.(食品或化学品)营养物,营养品( nutrient的名词复数 ) | |
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2 genetically | |
adv.遗传上 | |
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3 fungus | |
n.真菌,真菌类植物 | |
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4 replacement | |
n.取代,替换,交换;替代品,代用品 | |
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5 replacements | |
n.代替( replacement的名词复数 );替换的人[物];替代品;归还 | |
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6 shipping | |
n.船运(发货,运输,乘船) | |
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7 yeasts | |
酵母( yeast的名词复数 ); 酵母菌; 发面饼; 发酵粉 | |
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8 decaying | |
v.(使)腐烂,腐朽( decay的现在分词 );衰败,衰退,衰落 | |
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