| NAIROBI, 7 June 2010 (IRIN) - A deadly fungus that has blighted thousands of tonnes of maize in Kenya could be defeated by introducing a less dangerous cousin to crops while still in the field, say scientists.
"The bio-control technology works by introducing strains of the Aspargillus flavus fungus that do not produce the aflatoxin, or ‘the good guys’, into the affected fields, which outcompete and drastically reduce the population of the poison-producing strains, or ‘the bad guys’," according to a statement released by the Agriculture Research Service of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA-ARS), the Africa-based International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), and African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF).
Symptoms of the poison produced by these “bad guys” include swollen stomach and legs, fatigue, yellowing eyes, liver cancer, reduced immunity and even death. Aflatoxin has killed at least 200 people in Kenya since 2004, according to government figures.
In May 2009, the Kenyan government announced that some 2.3 million 90kg bags of maize were contaminated with aflatoxin (the term is a contraction of “A. flavus toxin”), largely because an unexpected bumper crop and heavy rains had prevented farmers from drying the grain sufficiently to prevent the formation of the moisture-loving poison.
James Muthomi, a plant pathologist at the University of Nairobi's department of plant science and crop protection, welcomed the announcement, but offered some caveats.
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