Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Devastatin­g fungi threaten wheat in WB

Disease damaged 20K hectare crops in B’desh in 2016

- Ravik Bhattachar­ya & Halim Mondal letters@hindustant­imes.com

CHAPRA(WESTBENGAL): Sixty-yearold Dulal Sheikh of Sonpukur village of Nadia district in West Bengal was overwhelme­d with despair as he watched his labour of love go up in flames on Saturday.

Officials from the agricultur­e department had just set alight his standing wheat crop to stem the spread of a deadly fungus that had ravaged fields across Bangladesh last year and is now threatenin­g harvest in West Bengal.

Since the last week of February, authoritie­s have launched an offensive against symptoms of what is known as the ‘wheat blast disease’, first identified in Brazil in 1985. It reared its ugly head last month in Jalangi of Murshidaba­d district, before making a worrisome appearance in several blocks of Nadia. If allowed to spread, experts said the fungus could be deadly, devouring standing wheat crop quickly.

“We are not taking chances whatsoever,” said Pranab Kumar Hembram, an assistant director of agricultur­e, who along with other officials had descended on Sheikh’s field to destroy the crop.

The officials are in a race to clear the fields and burn the wheat to ensure there are no fungal spores that can travel from Bengal to the wheat bowl of the country in the Hindi heartland.

“We are felling the crop first and then spraying kerosene and setting the field on fire. We must ensure that all crops and seeds are destroyed.

The spores which spread through air has to be contained,” said Arun Roy, project co-ordinator and additional director of the state agricultur­e department.

To contain the spread of wheat blast, the state government has deployed men and machines, including combined harvester machines to chop off the crop, and jars of kerosene to set them alight.

The outbreak of wheat blast last year took a heavy toll on Bangladesh, where crops of over 20,000 hectares had to be burnt. Both Nadia and Murshidaba­d border Bangladesh, alarming the government in West Bengal.

The anti-fungus drive is said to be for protecting wheat crops. But Dulal Sheikh is desolate watching his crop go up in flames. “I had invested ₹4000 for 12.5 cottah of land in terms of seed and fertilizer­s. This is apart from the toil my son and I put in. If everything went well I would have got ₹6,000 for my produce, which means a profit of ₹2,000. But now I don’t know what will I do,” he said, watching the thick smoke billowing from his field.

The administra­tion is offering ₹50,375 as compensati­on for crop destroyed per hectare. “The amount is paltry and we are not sure when the money will be disbursed,” said Atiur Khan, a farmer of Sonpukur, whose crop was also set alight.

Nadia is one of the most fertile tracts of Bengal with Gangetic alluvial soil.

Diverse crops from jute, oninon, red chilli to paddy and wheat are grown in abundance in the region.

Fortunatel­y, the fungus affects only wheat and, as a result, the adjacent fields laden with red chilli and onion are safe.

OFFICIALS ARE IN A RACE TO CLEAR FIELDS TO ENSURE THE FUNGAL SPORES DON’T TRAVEL FROM BENGAL TO THE HINDI HEARTLAND

 ?? SUBHANKAR CHAKRABORT­Y/HT PHOTO ?? Standing wheat crop set ablaze in Sonpukur village in Nadia district of West Bengal on Saturday.
SUBHANKAR CHAKRABORT­Y/HT PHOTO Standing wheat crop set ablaze in Sonpukur village in Nadia district of West Bengal on Saturday.

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