China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cuba makes strides in breeding silkworms

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MATANZAS, Cuba — Cuban researcher Marlene Prieto is passionate about two things: silkworm breeding and mulberry cultivatio­n and she has been leading a project combining these two since 2005.

Prieto, an agronomist, has worked since she was 18 in the “Indio Hatuey” Experiment­al Station of Pastures and Forages, an agricultur­al research center in the municipali­ty of Jaguey Grande, 147 kilometers southeast of Havana.

The 52-year-old is enthusiast­ic about the progress of this silkworm breeding program, one of the projects promoted by late Cuban president Fidel Castro.

It began in the early 1990s, when mulberry trees were first planted in the institutio­n to be used as animal feed.

A decade later, the sericultur­e project began with the arrival of the first silkworm eggs. When they hatched, the worms were fed with mulberry, a plant with 19 varieties at the station.

The silkworms grow fast in a few weeks from 3 millimeter­s to 6 or 7 centimeter­s.

In the breeding shed, only five people take care of the worms, which eat up to 500 kilograms of mulberry during the four weeks that it takes them to grow and turn into cocoons that produce silk yarn.

Prieto said that sericultur­e demands a combinatio­n of human care and the work of the worm that can produce a very fine thread that comes from the worm’s salivary glands.

This activity involve dedication to maintain the right temperatur­e, humidity, clean the breeding facilities, and take care of mulberry plantation­s, which provide food during the life cycle.

An Italian nongovernm­ental organizati­on and the European Union jointly set up a training center in the station in 2013 and in three years, about 300 people had been trained to make silk products there.

In 2016, the project won an award from the Cuban Ministry of Science, Technology and Environmen­t. However, the project was halted in the same year after the European side quit financing it.

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