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Nothing
is left to chance in the banana farm of multi-awarded farmer
Samuel Cortez of Cauayan in Isabela Province. His most effective
banana farming practice --- the use of plantlets nurtured
in a test tube.
Cortez
is one of 20 farmers in Cauayan City, who are ‘cautiously’
bringing back banana production to their farms. In 2003, infestation
by the banana bunchy top virus (BBTV) forced them to eradicate
all their banana plants. This experience was more than traumatic
for farmers like them who had high hopes of raking in considerable
income from a new commodity.
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The
Philippines was the world’s fourth top banana producer
in 2006 and ranks second biggest exporter with 2.3 million
t valued at US $404 million in 2006. Of the total area around
the world, which is planted to banana, 9.38% is found in the
Philippines.
In
the Cagayan Valley Region, however, the BBTV disease is common,
more so in Isabela, especially in Cauayan City. In 2004, the
Department of Agrarian Reform-Provincial Agrarian Reform Office
of Isabela, Cagayan Valley Agriculture and Resources Research
and Development Consortium, and Isabela State University started
rehabilitating banana farms mainly through disease-free, tissue-cultured
planting materials.

Cortez and other farmers in Isabela were apprehensive
at first in using tissue-cultured plantlets because they
were small and difficult to raise. Like other farmers
in the province, Cortez was more familiar with rice. He
was even awarded by the Department of Agriculture as the
most outstanding rice farmer in the country for three
consecutive years from 2000 to 2002.
Management Practices Apart
from the tissue-cultured planting materials, Cortez
follows the packaging technology in Lakatan production
most
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in his area. He uses water from shallow tubes for irrigation.
Because tissue-cultured Lakatan does not thrive well in
too 3,500 Lakatan plants. Most of them are now bearing
fruits. Farmers from around Isabela and neighboring provinces
in the region like Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino, and even
farmers from Benguet, started visiting the farm of Cortez.
The farm has given him and the other banana farmers new
hope.
With
the success of his initial banana farm establishment
through tissue-cultured Lakatan, a modest nursery for
tissue-cultured banana is being planned. Cortez is satisfied
that he gets income from the fruits, as well as from
selling suckers to farmers who have been encouraged
to plant bananas again. Because of the disease-free
and tissue-cultured Lakatan, as much as 85% of the BBTV
disease has been eradicated in Cauayan, San Mateo, and
Alicia towns. (Dr. Biley E. Temanel – ISU, CVARRD)
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