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Going bananas

A killer fungus known as Tropical Race 4, or TR4, is ravaging banana plantations worldwide. What can be done to save this much-loved fruit?

The world’s most popular banana is under threat. A killer fungus is ravaging plantations of the Cavendish banana worldwide. It travels through the soil at lightning speed and chokes the banana plant so its leaves shrivel up and die. The disease is known as Tropical Race 4, or TR4 for short, and it has spread across the globe from Australia, to the Philippines, Pakistan and Mozambique. In Colombia, where 30,000 people are employed in banana plantations, the government declared a state of national emergency when the fungus first arrived on farms in 2019.

But there is hope. An international community of scientists is experimenting with different techniques to try to halt the spread of TR4 whether that’s through gene-editing, selective breeding or injecting microbes into the soil.

Presenter Harry Wallop travels to Austria where nuclear scientists are blasting banana plants with radiation to try and create disease-resistant strains of the Cavendish banana. He also samples alternative varieties of banana that might replace it.

Presenter: Harry Wallop
Producer: Robin Markwell

(Photo: Banana counter in supermarket)

Available now

23 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Tue 13 Aug 2024 07:06GMT
  • Tue 13 Aug 2024 14:06GMT
  • Tue 13 Aug 2024 17:06GMT
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