A digital tool that uses barcodes to routinely track the banana breeding process is helping scientists identify suitable varieties, with the hope of improving cultivation programmes.
The banana breeding tracking tool, BTracT, was developed as part of a project led by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), according to a statement issued by the IITA last month.
A specific barcode identity, according to the scientists, is fixed on each plant in each location, and the BTracT records features such as pest resistance, plant stature, colour and feel of cooked bananas. The details are then stored in a global banana breeding database called MusaBase to be accessed by scientists.
Scientists say that prior to the development of BTracT, it was challenging to organise and keep track of data on banana varieties being bred over several years.
“When I arrived [here] six years ago, all of the operations were written down and then transferred to three different Excel spread sheets: for pollinations, for seeds harvested … and seeds that were being weened for the field and planted in the field,” says Allan Brown, IITA banana breeder based in Arusha, Tanzania. “There were mistakes made on all of these sheets and they rarely matched up with each other.”
Many researchers, he adds, struggle with these same issues, so any innovation that increases the efficiency of the breeding programme or reduces the time required to develop new varieties will benefit smallholders.
Trushar Shah, IITA’s Integrated Breeding Platform hub manager, tells SciDev.Net that the tool can be used to collect field and laboratory data through Android handheld tablets or phones, with a dashboard aggregating the data from different users and locations. The dashboard also provides real-time analytics and reporting at all levels of the breeding programme.
“The tool’s initial development took over a year with deployment and adoption in Arusha followed by other breeding locations,” Shah says. The development started late 2017 and it is now fully operational within the IITA banana breeding programmes in Uganda and Tanzania.