Yahoo – AFP,
Carlos Mario Marquez, 1 December 2015
![]() |
The
CENTA-EAC bean is the product of hybridization: the combining of
naturally
formed plants to form a cross-breed (AFP Photo/Marvin Recinos)
|
Quezaltepeque
(El Salvador) (AFP) - "These beans are miraculous because they beat
droughts," crowed Manuel Ceren, a farmer in El Salvador trying out a
hybrid, climate change-defying crop produced by Salvadoran, Colombian and
Honduran experts.
In
Quezaltepeque, a village 30 kilometers north of San Salvador, Ceren and 13
other co-farmers feel fortunate to be the first testing the bean.
They
proudly showed off an abundant harvest of around 0.7 of a hectare (1.7 acres)
of the bean grown on the farm where they work, to the awed gaze of visitors.
![]() |
Farmers in
Quezaltepeque are trying out
a hybrid, climate change-defying bean
produced by
Salvadoran, Colombian and
Honduran experts (AFP Photo/Marvin
Recinos)
|
"Other
people called us crazy. But today a lot of them are admiring the harvest."
The type of
light red bean they are using, which is also resistant to an infection known as
bean golden yellow mosaic virus, was painstakingly developed with the help of
El Salvador's National Center for Agricultural and Forestry Technology (CENTA).
Dubbed
CENTA-EAC, the bean is not a biotech crop designed by genetic engineers slicing
up chromosomes.
Rather it
is the product of hybridization: the combining of naturally formed plants to
form a cross-breed.
"You
could say it's the simple cross-fertilization of red bean and black bean plants
in a process that in this case took five years of selecting and discarding
plants until the desired variety was created," a CENTA researcher,
Aldemaro Clara, explained.
A search
for better crops
The
Salvadoran experiment came as a prolonged drought settled on Central America
this year, causing heavy crop losses across a broad swathe of land stretching
from Costa Rica to Guatemala.
Because of
the lack of water, 2.3 million small Central American farmers will need food
aid, the UN's World Food Program has warned.
The
CENTA-EAC bean is part of a decade-old effort by laboratories in the region to
come up with hybrids able to survive and even prosper during the recurring
droughts. With the help of farmers, it was noted that it was possible to come
up with crops adapted to extreme weather conditions.
"Our
mission to produce seeds resistant to climate change, which in this region
means against high temperatures, long droughts and extremely heavy rainy
seasons," Rolando Ventura, another CENTA researcher, said.
The whole
region is working along the same lines. In Guatemala, scientists are working on
the ICTA-Chorti, which will not only resist droughts but also be rich in iron.
In
Nicaragua, another institute has made a variety of red bean, the INTA-Tomabu,
also able to survive when water is scarce.
![]() |
A farmer
harvests and cleans beans of the CENTA-EAC variety at a farm in
Quezaltepeque
(AFP Photo/Marvin Recinos)
|
Corn,
tomatoes and cacao
Candida
Lazon, who is trying out that bean on her farm, said: "Here, it almost
never rains. We have managed to grow the INTA-Tomabu bean by watering it just
once every 12 days. I'm thrilled about this seed because it adapts to the very
dry local climate."
It's not
beans that are being made to "adapt" to climate change.
In Panama,
one of the first countries in the region to work with types of corn resistant
to changing weather, has come up with a new seed.
"In
the case of corn, these seeds are compatible with higher temperatures, 35 to 36
degrees (95 to 97 degrees Fahrenheit), and drought-tolerant," said Jose
Alberto Yau, deputy director for seeds at the country's IDIAP Agriculture and
Fishing Research Institute.
In El
Salvador, farmers already have the option of using a type of corn called
CENTA-Pasaquina, but it has fallen from favor because of its perceived low
yield.
Nicaragua
meanwhile has a type of virus-resistant tomato seed christened INTA-Jinotega
that copes with temperatures over 25 degrees centigrade.
In Costa
Rica, it's cocoa -- a crop essential to the economy -- that is being looked at
in the Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center with hopes of
coming up with a more resistant variety.
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