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Black sigatoka disease

  • Banana fungal disease
  • Black plague

Nature

Black Sigatoka disease is caused by a fungus Mycosphaerella fijiensis and affects bananas. The fungus spreads spores that infect and destroy banana and plantain leaves. The leaves turn brown, plant energy reserves are depleted, and fruit production is greatly reduced. A native variant of the plantain is resistant to the disease, but is not acceptable to consumers because it is round instead of banana-shaped. Aerially sprayed fungicides can protect against the disease, but are too expensive for small-scale farmers.

Background

Black Sigatoka disease was first detected in Honduras in 1972. It then spread rapidly throughout Central America, Mexico, and North and South America.

Incidence

Within 4 years in the 1980's, there was an 80% drop in plantain banana production in Costa Rica due to Black Sigatoka disease, which reduced the plantain crop from 26,000 to 5000 tonnes.

Broader

Related

Value

Plague
Yet to rate
Disease
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-being

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(G) Very specific problems
Subject
  • Plant life » Thallophyta, bryophyta, pteridophyta
  • Medicine » Pathology
  • Society » Racial, ethnic groups
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Nov 2, 2022