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Ministry issues warning on maize smut

Maize smut grows down the silks to the kernels and causes galls on the ears. Wikimedia Commons

The Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation (MAI) has warned farmers about a fungus known as “maize smut” and asked them to use seeds that do not contain the fungus.

[Read this report in Arabic]

The warning comes as the maize cultivation season gets under way.

Mansour al-Aqel, director-general of the MAI's agricultural information department, said maize smut appeared in Yemen many years ago due to farmers not selecting improved, clean seeds. The fungus only attacks maize.

"The spread of the disease depends on the farmers themselves. It is caused by selecting unclean spikes," he told IRIN on 12 August, adding “there are improved seeds that are treated in a way that can fight the fungus.”

Al-Aqel said if farmers do not select improved and clean spikes, the losses caused by maize smut could be big. "Losses differ from one farmer to another. The lazy farmer would lose the most. On some farms, losses could run to 60 percent. If the fungus is left untreated, then it causes higher losses," he said.

"Maize production has begun to increase. It is cultivated on 600,000 hectares and this year the area [of cultivation] has increased," al-Aqel said.

Yemen imports about 75 percent of its food needs, including 2.1 million tonnes of cereals each year.

More about the disease

According to al-Aqel, when the maize crop is infected, black spores replace the kernels, making the plants useless.

Maize smut is a kind of fungus caused by the pathogenic plant fungus Ustilago maydis. It often enters plants through wounds made by cultivating equipment. The fungus grows down the silks to the kernels and causes galls on the ears.

According to a factsheet by Cornell University's Plant Disease Diagnostic Clinic, maize smut is now present in nearly all countries where maize is grown. “Any part of the plant above the ground can be invaded, although it is more common on the ears, the tassels and the nodes than it is on the leaves, the internodes and aerial roots. After the spores mature, the covering becomes dry and brittle, breaks open, and permits the black powdery contents to fall out,” the factsheet says.

Maize grown on heavily manured soil often develops severe smut, especially in hot and humid conditions.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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