Orobanche species in Sudan: History, Distribution and Management
Babiker A.G.T. , E. A. Ahmed , D.A. Dawoud and N.K. Abdella
Abstract:
Orobanche species are debilitating root parasitic weeds on several
economically important crops. In Sudan three species, O. ramosa, O. cernua
and O. minor, were reported as early as 1948. O. crenata was first reported
in 2000/2001. Of the four Orobanche species O. ramosa and O. crenata are
naturalized and have become pests of economic importance. Tomato (Lycopersicon
esculentum Mill.) and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.), the main hosts of O.
ramosa, and faba bean (Vicia faba L.), the major host of O. crenata are
grown, annually, on 40, 20 and 66 thousand ha, respectively mainly in the
alluvial soils of the Nile valley. Mismanagement stemming from lack of
awareness of the debilitating effects of the Orobanche species, their
biology, invasive nature and means and methods of spread has led to
out-break of the parasites. O. ramosa has spread from Rosarious on the Blue
Nile and Kosti on the White Nile to Wadi Halfa on the southern borders of
Egypt. The highest infestations were, however, reported from the Gezira and
Khartoum States causing serious losses on tomato and potato yields. O.
crenata was first reported in Merowe governorate in the Northern State in
2000/2001 and subsequently in 2001/2002 in the River Nile State. The
parasite is spreading at an escalating rate. Infested area in Merowe
governorate increased to about a 1000-fold within 5 years. The number of
infestation foci in the River Nile state increased from 1 in 2001/2002 to
over 90 in 2005/2006. Pending intensity of infestation, losses of 2-100% in
yield of faba bean were reported. No single measure provides effective
control and an integrated approach comprising preventive, cultural,
biological and chemical methods needs to be adopted. Education is the most
important element in control and containment of Orobanche spp. Farmers and
policy makers, through training, farmer's field schools, packstoppings,
field visits, lectures, radio and television messages, leaflets, brochures
articles in local news papers and a local workshop were made cognizant of
the parasites. The importance of starting with clean seeds, restriction of
grazing, cleaning of farm equipment and eradication of incipient infestation
were stressed. Eradication of O. ramosa, which is widely spread, is
impractical. At present control measures comprise hand-pulling and trap
cropping. O. crenata, being a recent introduction, is less of a problem than
O. ramosa. The O. crenata free area is estimated to be about 87-95% of the
total area under the crop. Detection surveys, regulatory and control
measures are invoked by the federal ministry of agriculture and local
governments to ensure against continual spread of the parasites into new
areas. Light and incipient infestations are removed by hand, while heavily
infested fields are planted to crops other than faba bean. The herbicides
glyphosate and imazethapyr are promising treatments for O. crenata control
in faba bean.
Sudan
Journal of Agricultural Research
Vol. 10 (2007) PP.107-114 |