CAMEROON'S CHANGING WEATHER LINKED TO CROP DISEASE
Changing climate conditions in Cameroon are thought to
be partly to blame for a fungal disease of the staple cocoyam
crop. Ful Joy
Kughong reports
Cocoyam is a plant known by several names. In much of the world
it is called taro. Some people know it as
elephant ears, while in Nigeria and much of Cameroon it is simply
cocoyam. But whatever you call it, it is an important food source,
both as a root vegetable and for its big, fleshy leaves.
But something has been happening to the cocoyams of Cameroon. A
disease, which causes the plants to rot from leaf to tuber, emerged
in the south west region of the country after the early rains in
March 2010 and quickly spread to parts of the north west, west and
littoral regions.
'When I saw my farm, I almost collapsed. My children asked
whether this meant that their schooling had ended. Tears ran down
my eyes. They said they would look for a holiday job. I could not
answer,' says Ntumeh Angeline Bih, a widow and mother of four
children who lives in Bafut, one of the worst affected areas.
The disease, identified as phytophthora colocasiae, and also
known as taro leaf blight, was new to Cameroon but was already
known in Malaysia and some other South East Asian countries. Mboh
Michael, from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development in
the north west region, suspects the disease was a partly a result
of changing climatic conditions.
The 2010 dry season lasted longer than usual and even when the
rains came, they lasted only a few days. Mboh believes the fungus
was transferred by the winds in dust clouds during the dry season
and deposited on the leaves of the crops. With the return of the
rain, the spores found favourable conditions for their
development.
Mboh Michael and specialists Ngoko Zachée, a plant pathologist,
Njuallem Dominic, a plant breeder, and Atanga Jacob, an expert on
nematode worms, visited the north west region to assess the damage,
determine the causes of the disease and propose solutions.The
scientists linked the dust that settled on the plants to the
disease, but without clear evidence as to the exact relationship
between the two.
Atanga Jacob says that if rains had fallen, they would have
washed away the dust: 'We are putting forward the hypothesis that
the dust blown to Cameroon by the wind brought the disease, because
we had never had the disease before.'
Mboh says that when there is drought, the spores dry out, become
lighter and can then be blown anywhere. Yet they remain viable.
He says: 'When the temperature is hotter and there is enough
moisture, the leaves provide a favourable setting for the spores to
germinate. We just know that up there in the atmosphere there are
spores moving with the wind and when they find the environment
favourable they develop.'
Most of the crops in the affected areas were completely
destroyed. Ngoko says three pathogens were involved, but the main
problem was the colocasia blight. He says: 'The causal agent is a
fungus that destroys both the leaves and the stems of the cocoyam.'
The disease starts as a small dark spot on one of the cocoyam's
leaves, which then spreads to all the mature leaves, causing them
to rot. The stem and the tuber follow. The farmers in these parts
of the country practice mixed cropping and no other crop was
affected.
Cocoyams are second only to maize as the most widely eaten
foodstuff in the affected areas. They can be pounded into achu, a
traditional dish among some tribes of the north west region, now
widely consumed throughout Cameroon. They can also be roasted,
cooked in their skin, or peeled, boiled and eaten with a wide
variety of sauces. Even the leaves are used to prepare soup and
another dish called ekwang.
The effects of the blight look likely to take a long time to
heal. Although the fungus did not resurfaced this season, cocoyam
is absent from the market and from the menu of families who depend
on it because there
was no seed this year. The few farmers who had retained seed grew
the crop for their own consumption. The little that makes its way
to market is now very expensive.
Restaurants in cities like Douala, Yaounde and Bamenda, which
specialise in achu, were affected badly. 'What we use now to
prepare achu is what should have been used as seed. I am afraid we
may not even have seed for the next farming season, and that means
no achu,' says Regina Shiri, a restaurant owner in Bamenda.
Maize production in Cameroon has never met demand in the country
and plantains, another staple food, are usually very expensive.
Preventing or treating future damage to the cocoyam crop is
essential in a country in which rising food prices have caused
unrest and continue to threaten food security.
Ful Joy Kughong
is a Cameroon-based journalist who writes for The Farmers'
Voice and Panos
Back