Ugandans discover Pesticide for Black Coffee Twig Borer
By
Valerian Kkonde
PEARL NEWS SERVICE
The biopesticide Black Off. PNS Photo |
Uganda’s neglected yet crucial
agricultural sector has reason to smile. Reticia Products has come up with a
solution to the Black Coffee Twig Borer (BCTB) that has devastated miles of
Coffee gardens leading to the aggravation of poverty, human rights abuses and distrust
of government.
The bio pesticide, named Black- Off, is
already in use by farmers in Rakai and Masaka districts where it was first
experimented.
“The major constraints hindering my
coffee production is BCTB, thieves, drought and lack of labour,” says Joseph
Rogers Kateregga a coffee farmer in Nabyajjwe II village, Nabyajjwe Parish,
Lwankoni sub-county, Rakai district. He has about 5 acres of coffee.
Kateregga says that he applied Black Off
between April and June 2014 at a rate of 50 milliliters in 15 liters of water
after trimming off the infested plant materials.
“I observed a tremendous reduction in
infestation after applying Black Off. It is hard to imagine how joyous and
relieved I feel! We have been cutting our coffee trees and burning them in a
bid to fight this weevil, but without success. How situations change!”
Miss Nakiwala’s farm is located in Mweruka
village, Bugere parish, Kyesiiga sub-county, Masaka district. The farmer owns
about 1 acre under coffee and the main constraints hindering coffee production
are: BCTB management, lack of manure and chemicals to manage the twig borer.
“I control BCTB by spraying with Black
Off at a rate of 20 mls in 15 liters of water every month. The infestation
generally reduced when Black Off was used.”
“This is a major break through for
coffee farmers. We have been spending a lot of money on spraying because the
chemicals we have been using have side effects, especially on women. We have
been hiring men to spray but we are going to do the spraying our selves,” the
excited wife to the traditional leader of Kooki said at the launch of the biopesticide
Black Off.
Farmers praised Reticia Products and the
Entomology team for their efforts to assist farmers out of the dungeons of the
Black Coffee Twig Borer, so that they maximize their profits.
Black Off is a relatively new biopesticide
manufactured and being promoted by Reticia
Products for managing the twig borer. Reticia Products is owned by Ugandans: Mr.
Andrew Ssewanyana and Mrs. Alexandra Miwanda Bagenda. It is
based in Kyengera, Kampala-Masaka road.
This discovery was assisted by the
Reticia Products’ experience in body lotions.
It was in March 2014, while in Kamugenyi,
Masaka district working on electric wiring and passion fruit farming that
Andrew Ssewanyana was struck by the devastation meted out by the Black Coffee
Twig Borer to the coffee farmers. Coffee
growing areas that have tasted the wrath of the BCTB commonly refer to it as
the Coffee Wilt Disease.
“In April, I imported my knowledge of
the human skin cleanser, a herbal skincare product called Andy, that works well
on human skins.
“In May Reticia started using the cleanser
on the beetles as well. The team discovered that the herbal skin cleanser had
the capacity to weaken the beetles but they could not die. The team continued
experimenting by varying the various ingredients mixed with some chemicals
until we got a solution that killed the beetles.
“The product by this time was named
Our Coffee, but was later changed to Black Borer. We only felt satisfied when
we got the name of Black Off and the product has since been known by this
name.”
The Uganda Coffee Development Authority
(UCDA) maintains that Coffee remains the leading commercial agricultural
commodity and major foreign exchange earner. It accounts for nearly 20% of all
exports by value during past several years. Nearly 1.5 million, mostly rural
households- that is about nine million people- depend on coffee- related
activities for their livelihood.
Dr. Godfrey H. Kagezi says that the BCTB
– Xylosandrous compactus (Eichhoff)
(Coleoptera: Scolytidae) is a relatively new pest in Uganda attacking coffee
and a number of other plant species. It was first reported in Bundibugyo in
1993 but now spreading rapidly to other areas particularly in the Robusta Coffee
growing Regions.
“Being a new pest, there are limited
control strategies for the pest. Secondly, the pest spends most of its life
cycle inside the host plant galleries, making control rather difficult.
“Farmers in Uganda and else where
usually use cultural and sometimes combined with inorganic pesticides to
control BCTB.”
Dr. Kagezi is an entomologist with the
National Coffee Research Institute (NaCORI) and he headed the study to
determine the efficacy of Black Off on the BCTB.
The NaCORI Entomology team found that Black
Off2 (Dilute) was able to kill 66.7% BCTB while Black Off1 (Concentrated) was
able to kill 58.3% BCTB.
“Cultural methods are labour intensive
and may be uneconomical whereas, inorganic pesticides are being discouraged
because of their hazardous effects on humans, animals and the environment.
“Less expensive natural (organic)
biopesticides could be an alternative to inorganic pesticides.
“These biopesticides are biodegradable
and environment-friendly and less likely for insects to develop resistance
against them. Black Off is an example of such biopesticides which has been
developed.”
In Uganda alone, the BCTB is known to
infect more than 50 plant species but worldwide it infects 200 crop species.
The female beetle bores into the
berry-bearing primary branches causing them to wilt and die off within a few
weeks. This leads to loss of berries or
coffee beans.
“An estimated annual yield loss of 8.6%,
approximately US $ 41 million has been incurred in Uganda. And it is likely to
increase within the coffee plantations and to new plantations and infestation
(virgin) areas if the epidemic is not contained,” Dr. Kagezi warns.
The objectives of the study were to
determine the efficacy of the pesticide against adult twig borer in laboratory-
in vitro- conditions, and to assess
farmers’ perception of the efficacy of Black Off against BCTB.
The biopesticide is made by mixing plant
extracts: oranges, lemons and Aloe vera among others, with water and Sodium
laureth sulfate and incubating the mixture at room temperature for 30 days.
Adult Black Coffee Twig Borers were
extracted form the primary infested branches collected from on- site coffee
plantations at the NaCORI, Kituuza, Mukono district.
“Both biopesticides were able to cause mortality to
adult BCTB in vitro conditions with
their efficacy comparable to the recommended synthetic pesticide (IMAX),”
concluded the NaCORI team.
Other members on the NaCORI team were: Mr. Patrick
Kucel, Mr. Joseph Sseruyange and Mr. John Ssemuwemba.
NaCORI entomologists recommended that Since BCTB
spends most of its life cycle inside the host plant galleries; a systemic
chemical needs to be used to kill it. Therefore, the mode of action, whether
systemic or contact, and the delivery mechanisms need to be determined.
The effect of these biopesticides on the various life
stages of the beetle: eggs, larvae and pupae, should also be investigated.
The team further recommended that the effect of the
biopesticides on the coffee and other susceptible plants, phytotoxicity, should
be determined. The biopesticides should also be tried on other insect pests of
coffee particularly in areas where organic farming is being promoted e.g. on
Arabica coffee in Mt. Elgon region and weaver ants in Northern Uganda.
The excitement is enormous on the part of Reticia
Products, coffee farmers and the NaCORI Entomology team.
Ssewanyana says that packaging is a major challenge
given the rate of adulteration of products in the country. Funding is not forth
coming.
“We are on track to release our dream of a
biopesticide for this destructive Coffee Wilt Disease. We also need a machine
for squeezing lemon juice without harming our workers. Even the media is not
picking up this major agricultural break through with the zeal similar to
political stories.”
For the coffee farmers, the discovery of Black Off is
an opportunity they cannot allow slip through their hands. They are helping
Reticia Products to identify fellow farmers in their localities with whom the
biopesticide can be entrusted with. These will be the coffee farmers’ Black Off
collecting points, and that way product adulteration is partly solved and
farmers can look to improved coffee production, increased income and human
rights respected. It is a key step toward poverty alleviation and sustainable development.
2 Comments:
wow this great
we have been crying for a long time since 1993
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