Tanzania - New AI tech to help farmers in fighting banana disease

06.08.2024 850 views

Farmers in Tanzania will detect and fight against Banana Bunchy Top Disease (BBTD) following the development of an Artificial Intelligence (AI) tech project developed by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA.)

The Regional Emergency Response Plan To Control the Banana Bunchy Top Disease (BBTD) Outbreak in East Africa project, worth over US$300,000 majors in the development of key technologies to assist the farmers to cheat the virus-based disease, among others.

Giving an exclusive interview with The Guardian at the ongoing 31st Tanzania Agricultural International Exhibition, Rudolf Shirima, a researcher at IITA expressed that the disease is caused by a virus known as Banana Bunchy Top Virus (BBTV).

He added the disease which has so far destroyed a huge percentage of banana plantations across the country has no chemical cure because all the cultivated banana and plantain varieties are susceptible to Banana Bunchy Top Disease.

"The disease is caused by a virus known as Banana Bunchy Top Virus (BBTV). The virus is transmitted by an insect vector, the banana aphid (Pentalonia nigronervosa), or through the use of infected planting material (sticker,in vitro plants, or shoots from micropropagation of corms)," he expressed.

To curtail the disease, he said through the project, IITA has developed digital artificial intelligence facilities to help farmers to detect the disease.

"IITA is working in sync with the Ministry of Agriculture, the Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TARI), and the Tanzania Plant Health and Pesticides Authority (TPHPA) to disseminate to the farmers key agronomic knowledge and skills to fight against the disease," he said.

He added that the vision is to contain further spread of the virus to allow banana farmers to heighten production and productivity.

"We're using several different approaches to assist the farmers to battle against the disease, apart from the use of the artificial intelligence facilities," he said.

He said the reliable solution to curtail the disease was a total uprooting of the infected banana plants to limit further spread.

The disease causes crop loss between 90 and 100pc in just one season after infection, which means, farmers will lose all the income they used to generate from the sales of fruits in the market, according to him.

The other method against the disease that the project is training the farmers, he said was the use of special pesticides to kill the disease's vector virus, banana aphid (Pentalonia nigronervosa).

 "We're also training the banana farmers how to develop and spread the infected banana plants soap forms as the way to kill the virus," he added.

In further efforts, he said the institute was also working to support the production of safe and quality banana seeds to overcome the disease.

"Among the ways for the spread of this disease is dissemination and use of contaminated (affected) banana seeds," he observed.

Since the inception of the project, he however said there had been good results because many farmers have so far managed to acquire vital skills and technologies to lessen the disease.

BBTD was reported for the first time in Tanzania in 2023 in Buhigwe district, Kigoma region. 

As of October 2023, the disease has spread in many regions, including Dar es Salaam, Coastal, Morogoro, Mbeya, Dodoma, Kilimanjaro and Mwanza.

The disease has spread widely and caused extensive damage in Kigoma, Kilimanjaro, and Mwanza.\

Farmers in Tanzania will detect and fight against Banana Bunchy Top Disease (BBTD) following the development of an Artificial Intelligence (AI) tech project developed by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA.

The Regional Emergency Response Plan To Control the Banana Bunchy Top Disease (BBTD) Outbreak in East Africa project, worth over US$300,000 majors in the development of key technologies to assist the farmers to cheat the virus-based disease, among others.

Giving an exclusive interview with The Guardian at the ongoing 31st Tanzania Agricultural International Exhibition, Rudolf Shirima, a researcher at IITA expressed that the disease is caused by a virus known as Banana Bunchy Top Virus (BBTV).

He added the disease which has so far destroyed a huge percentage of banana plantations across the country has no chemical cure because all the cultivated banana and plantain varieties are susceptible to Banana Bunchy Top Disease.

"The disease is caused by a virus known as Banana Bunchy Top Virus (BBTV). The virus is transmitted by an insect vector, the banana aphid (Pentalonia nigronervosa), or through the use of infected planting material (sticker,in vitro plants, or shoots from micropropagation of corms)," he expressed.

 

To curtail the disease, he said through the project, IITA has developed digital artificial intelligence facilities to help farmers to detect the disease.

"IITA is working in sync with the Ministry of Agriculture, the Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TARI), and the Tanzania Plant Health and Pesticides Authority (TPHPA) to disseminate to the farmers key agronomic knowledge and skills to fight against the disease," he said.

He added that the vision is to contain further spread of the virus to allow banana farmers to heighten production and productivity.

"We're using several different approaches to assist the farmers to battle against the disease, apart from the use of the artificial intelligence facilities," he said.

He said the reliable solution to curtail the disease was a total uprooting of the infected banana plants to limit further spread.

The disease causes crop loss between 90 and 100pc in just one season after infection, which means, farmers will lose all the income they used to generate from the sales of fruits in the market, according to him.

The other method against the disease that the project is training the farmers, he said was the use of special pesticides to kill the disease's vector virus, banana aphid (Pentalonia nigronervosa).

 "We're also training the banana farmers how to develop and spread the infected banana plants soap forms as the way to kill the virus," he added.

In further efforts, he said the institute was also working to support the production of safe and quality banana seeds to overcome the disease.

"Among the ways for the spread of this disease is dissemination and use of contaminated (affected) banana seeds," he observed.

Since the inception of the project, he however said there had been good results because many farmers have so far managed to acquire vital skills and technologies to lessen the disease.

BBTD was reported for the first time in Tanzania in 2023 in Buhigwe district, Kigoma region. 

As of October 2023, the disease has spread in many regions, including Dar es Salaam, Coastal, Morogoro, Mbeya, Dodoma, Kilimanjaro and Mwanza.

The disease has spread widely and caused extensive damage in Kigoma, Kilimanjaro, and Mwanza.

Source - https://www.ippmedia.com

02.02.2026

USA - Record-Breaking Cold Hits South, Leaving Snow, Accidents and Crop Damage

Record-breaking cold gripped the Southeast this weekend, bringing heavy snow to parts of Tennessee and North Carolina, canceling flights across the region and threatening citrus crops in Florida.

02.02.2026

Ghana - Government deepens engagement with fish farmers to boost aquaculture sector

The Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture, Hon. Emelia Arthur, has concluded a two-day working tour of major aquaculture facilities across the Eastern, Volta, and Greater Accra Regions.

02.02.2026

India - Govt Social Security Insurance Coverage Crosses 125 Crore Policies

The Union government on Monday said it is steadily expanding the reach of affordable insurance across the country through a mix of low-premium social security schemes, regulatory reforms and digital outreach, with the long-term objective of bringing every citizen under some form of insurance protection by 2047.

02.02.2026

Study shows insect farming byproduct boosts soil health, reduces crop damage

With insect farming projected to produce millions of tons of insects in the coming years, Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station researchers offer evidence that the insect farming byproduct called "frass" can improve soil health and reduce insect damage in soybean crops.

02.02.2026

USA - Winter weather creates hard work for local livestock farmers

While many residents were safely tucked inside during the snowstorm that hit the Shenandoah Valley on Jan. 25, Mindy Lipinski of Revercomb Farms in Bridgewater was not.

02.02.2026

USA - Statewide $10M agriculture innovation grant coming soon for Pennsylvania startups

Pennsylvania is reopening a funding opportunity for local agricultural technology companies, presenting another chance for startups in the space to level up their products.

01.02.2026

Australia - CSIRO’s research to tackle $150 million in crop loss

New research has unlocked the genetic code of a crop damaging fungus, opening the way for improved disease control

01.02.2026

India - Union Budget 2026 raises farm allocation but cuts crop insurance, keeps key schemes underfunded

Agriculture and allied activities saw an allocation of Rs 1.62 lakh crore, an increase of around 7 per cent compared to Revised Estimates of Rs 1.51 lakh crore in 2025-26.