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The Nigerian Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS)

Monday 30 May 2016

‘Tomato Tuta Absoluta Can Cause 50% Yields Reduction’

Tomatoes
Tomatoes
The former managing director of Katsina State Agriculture Development Programme (ADP), Alh Abashe Saidu, has tasked the federal government to urgently arrest the spread of the pest affecting tomato production, Tuta absoluta.


Tomatoes have been ravaged by the pest also known as ‘tomatoes ebola’ and has caused marketers to seek for imports of the products from nearby countries.

He explained that the pest is a dangerous leaf mining moth capable of causing 50 per cent reduction or total loss in tomatoes production.

“The pest is very prolific and produces eggs up to 10 to 12 times a year, adding that the female can lay as many as 300 eggs in a generation with a 30 to 35 days life cycle that is difficult to control,” Saidu said.
Speaking on the history of the pest, he said that it originated from South America and later migrated to the Mediterranean and then to North Africa.

“The pest was reported in Kafur local government of Katsina State late in 2015, and then in the Kadawa irrigation scheme, as wiping out tomatoes in the area. It later resurfaced in a greater infestation in the second quarter of 2016, again in Kafur local government area,” he further noted.

According to him, the outbreak was again reported in Makarfi, Hunkuyi, Soba, Zuntu, all in Kaduna State, Danja in Katsina State and Kadawa, Dakasoye, and Kura in Kano State, on Thursday, May 22, 2016. He lamented that some indigenous companies like the Dangote Tomato Company, which had invested millions of dollars to set up tomato processing factories, were now facing the threat of huge losses due to the activities of pest.

Referring to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) 2008 rating, Saidu said that Nigeria used to be number 13 in the list of tomato producing countries. He said that with the right policy and attractive incentives, the country could go up to be in the five topmost producers of tomato in the world.

“The Nigerian government must put in big efforts and funding to control it; a lot of foreign exchange is expended in importation of tomato paste which can be used for development of infrastructures,’’ he said.

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