BY MARIA ELENA CATAJAN
TABUK, Kalinga. — In this town, bananas may
soon become disease free.
Research from the Kalinga-Apayao State
College (KASC) recently made a major breakthrough in
agricultural research with its tissue cultured lakatan
plantlets.
Marciano Paroy Jr., KASC DevCom instructor,
said the Tissue Culture Laboratory of the Research Extension
Department went through a research package to improve banana
suckers aimed to produce disease-resistant plantlets.
Dr. Hazel Buslig, KASC Tissue culture expert,
led a team of researchers who made the literature of science
research into reality by culturing banana for adoption of
farmers in the province.
Lakatan cultured tissue was found to suit the
climate. A demo farm has since been established at the KASC
compound.
Mass propagation is now being carried out and
the initial plantlets produced are ready for dispersal at P25
per piece, Paroy said.
Ferdinand Ganotice, KASC Research
Coordinator, said research personnel are ready to extend
technical assistance to farmers who avail of their plantlets in
terms of proper handling, time, distance and method of planting.
The lakatan variety is highly in demand in
the market for its quality and superior taste.
KASC management is encouraging farmers to
visit the demo farm and prove for themselves why agriculture
technicians are introducing the lakatan variety as possible
replacement of the traditional bananas raised in the locality.
Under the One-Town-One Product program of government, Rizal,
Tabuk and Pinukpuk have chosen banana production as one of their
OTOP products for commercial production.