ICARDA News
INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR AGRICULTURAL
RESEARCH IN THE DRY AREAS
P.O. Box 5466, Aleppo, Syria
Phone: (963-21) 2213433, 2213477, 2225112,
2225012
Fax: (963-21) 2213490, 2225105; E-mail: ICARDA@CGIAR.ORG
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2 August, 1999
Breakthrough in breeding for Hessian fly
resistance in Morocco
Cereal growers in North Africa are safeguarding food supplies and the
environment while retrieving lost yield worth millions of dollars from the
ravages of a tiny fly.
In the dry areas of Morocco
alone, sowing bread wheat varieties resistant to attack from the Hessian fly is
worth US$20 million annually in restored yields. Moroccan bread wheat averages
36% crop loss to the pest, slightly less in durum wheat, but the fly can
produce three generations a year making attack likely.
Such losses are serious for a
country already importing grain to feed an expanding population. Nor is the
Hessian fly confined to Morocco, but its damage extends to some neighboring
western Mediterranean countries such as Algeria, Tunisia, Spain and Portugal.
This insect is also an important pest in the USA.
Farmers cannot justify using
environmentally questionable and expensive insecticides. Instead, Morocco’s
National Agricultural Research Institute (INRA), Kansas State University from
the USA and CIMMYT/ICARDA wheat program pooled resources to develop varieties
of both bread wheat and durum wheat with resistance. Left unchecked, the tiny
fly (3mm) lays its eggs on wheat leaves. Its larvae feed on nutrients, which
would normally plump up the ear of grain. At worst, wheat plants are so
weakened they fall over and die, giving complete crop failure.
Screening wheat germplasm from
Morocco, the USA and the joint CIMMYT/ICARDA wheat program has been carried out
in fly ‘hot spots’ and in the greenhouse in Morocco. Crosses of identified
sources of resistance with adapted Moroccan cultivars were carried out at
ICARDA’s Tel Hadya station in Syria and in Morocco. Potential varieties were
given their final tests in Morocco.
These joint multidisciplinary
efforts have just started yielding their fruits. Three lines of durum wheat
containing the H5 resistance gene from US germplasm are now in the release
pipeline. Three bread wheat varieties, Massira, Arrihane, and Aguilal have
already been released. Several other durum and bread wheat lines are in the
pipeline, including some developed using the doubled-haploid technique. Rough
estimates suggest that if all of Morocco’s wheat was produced using new,
resistant varieties, the extra grain would be worth US$336 million per year.
Morocco’s poorest farmers will
soon enjoy the benefits of growing wheat resistant to Hessian fly. The
resistant germplasm generated and the expertise developed in this area will
benefit other countries in the region. These efforts are continuing to widen
the genetic base for resistance to Hessian fly to cope with virulent biotypes
in the future.
For further
information on Hessian fly, please contact: CIMMYT/ICARDA wheat program at
ICARDA.
E-mail:
ICARDA@CGIAR.ORG
About ICARDA: Established in 1977, ICARDA serves the entire developing
world for the improvement of barley, lentil, and faba bean; and dry-area
developing countries for the on-farm management of water, improvement of
nutrition and productivity of small ruminants (sheep and goats), and rehabilitation and management of rangelands. In
the Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA) region, ICARDA is
responsible for the
improvement of durum and
bread wheats, chickpea,
pasture and forage legumes
and farming
systems; and for the
protection and enhancement of the natural resource base of water, land, and
biodiversity.