With deforestation continuing unabated and the demand for
quality wood remaining on the rise, the success of efforts at regaining
Philippine forest cover may lie on the quality of seedlings being planted to
replace lost vegetation. The UPLB College of Forestry and Natural Resources (CFNR)
has been pursuing this track of providing quality forest trees and other plants
via tissue culture.
Dr. Portia Lapitan, director of the UPLB Forest Biotechnology
Program, said: "We want planting materials that grow fast and perform very well
under adverse conditions in the field. Although the work now is still in the
experimental stages, the commercial scale production of quality forest species
may soon be realized."
A tree physiologist and forest geneticist, Dr. Lapitan
believes that biotechnology is necessary to meet the increasing demands for
planting stocks. As of now, the Philippines is said to need an estimated 195.4
million seedlings a year to meet the annual planting target for 100,000
hectares. At present, there are not enough existing seed sources of forest
species for reforestation and production in the country.
In the UPLB campus, the program’s modest laboratory is home
to hundreds of glass bottles with tiny, cloned seedlings of various tree and
non-tree species growing in modified Murashige and Skoog media. The Forest
Biotechnology Laboratory has been operational since 2002 and has produced a
number of valuable seedlings, all of which have been grown from tissue culture.
The seedlings come from germinated seeds of trees with
superior quality. The tissue-cultured seedlings are expected to reach maturity
earlier and perform better than the conventionally raised trees. They also
retain the quality of the mother tree, including its disease and pest
resistance.
The Forest and Biotechnology Program has developed tissue
culture protocols for Acacia mangium (mangium), Gmelina arborea (yemane),
Paraserianthes falcataria (falcate, Moluccan sau), Tectona grandis (teak), and
Calamus (rattan) species. Future work will include species such as the Falcata
tree (Paraserianthes falcataria), Jathropa, and the Moringa tree, commonly known
as "malunggay." These will be developed to answer the need for sources of
bio-fuel in the country.
According to Dr. Lapitan, the protocol for out-planting still
has to be refined in order to ensure higher seedling survival. She and her team
of scientists and researchers are now working to perfect the breeding and
biotechnology work to develop and produce planting materials in order to meet
the demand for reinstating the country’s forests and tree plantations.
At present, the program needs to find continued funding for
its operations, which require around P500,000 to P800,000 a year. The team is
looking at options to make the laboratory self-sustaining. Currently, it is
being supported by donations from the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources and PCARRD.