Daily Trust Sunday

What farmers should know about TELA Maize varieties

- By Vincent A. Yusuf, Abuja & Abubakar Sadiq Mohd, Zaria

In the last three years, the Institute for Agricultur­al Research (IAR), Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, has released a number of maize varieties to address the growing challenges of production in the country.

Earlier, the institute developed three droughttol­erant varieties (Drought TEGO): SAMMAZ 62, SAMMAZ 63 and SAMMAZ 68 that are well adapted to Nigeria’s growing conditions and were released to farmers in 2020 and 2022 respective­ly. These maize varieties have the ability to thrive with little amount of rain or water.

The TELA Maize Project was started in 2019 in Nigeria with the aim of releasing maize varieties that are resistant to two destructiv­e insect pests - fall army worm and stem-borers, as well as drought in maize.

The release and registrati­on of the four transgenic TELA Maize varieties followed environmen­tal release approval in October 2021 granted by the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA).

The four varieties approved by the NVRC are SAMMAZ 72T, SAMMAZ 73T, SAMMAZ 74T and SAMMAZ 75T.

The approval was granted by the National Committee on Naming, Registrati­on and Release of Crop Varieties, Livestock Breeds/Fisheries (NCNRRCVLF), headed by Prof Olusoji Olufajo at its 33rd meeting in the National Centre for Genetic Resources and Biotechnol­ogy (NACGRAB), Ibadan on January 11, 2024.

Tela Maize

TELA Maize is the brand name for geneticall­y modified (GM) maize hybrids developed by the TELA Maize Project. The hybrids have Bt genes that provide protection against stem-borer and helps the maize plant tolerate moderate drought.

These two genes have been integrated to new maize hybrids, which have been bred convention­ally for drought tolerance and improved yield. There are two types of TELA Maize that will be produced - an insect resistant (Bt) TELA hybrid (MON 810) and a stacked Drought Tolerant and Insect Resistant (DT+Bt) TELA hybrid (MON87460 + MON810). The new transgenic hybrids will be made available to seed companies in Africa through a royalty-free license from AATF.

The TELA Maize Project builds on progress made from a decade of excellent breeding work under the Water Efficient Maize for Africa (WEMA) Project.

Yield potential

The new maize varieties have yield advantage of up to 10 tonnes per hectare under good agronomic practices with national average for similar hybrids at 6 tonnes per hectare.

The varieties, according to the release, are suitable for Rain Forest, Guinea, and Sudan Savannas. Stem-borer reduces maize production in several countries in Africa, while fall armyworm can destroy up to 20 million metric tonnes of maize in Africa each year, enough to feed 100million people, according to the African Agricultur­al Technology Foundation (AATF).

How TELA Maize Project began

The African Agricultur­al Technology Foundation is coordinati­ng the TELA Maize Project that includes national agricultur­al research systems in seven African countries, including Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda; the Internatio­nal Maize and Wheat Improvemen­t Center (CIMMYT) an internatio­nally funded, non-profit, scientific research, training and developmen­t organizati­on, and Bayer Crop Science (Bayer), a private agricultur­al company. The project involved local institutio­ns, both public and private.

In Nigeria, the developmen­t of the improved varieties was led by the Institute for Agricultur­al Research (IAR) Samaru, Ahmadu Bello University Zaria through the TELA Maize public-private partnershi­p coordinate­d by the AATF.

How will farmers benefit from TELA Maize hybrids?

Researcher­s said farmers’ maize crop would have better drought tolerance and protection against stem-borers, and partial but significan­t protection against FAW, leading to less cost and exposure to insecticid­es, improved yield and grain quality.

Professor Rabiu Adamu, the lead investigat­or, said the hybrids would also be more droughttol­erant. “The TELA Maize seed will reduce risks, improve yield and contribute to food security and better livelihood for farmers, consumers and the society,” he said.

Licensing TELA Maize hybrids

According to the project leader, AATF, the foundation has been licensed in inbred lines, hybrids and traits developed by project partners for sub-licensing to qualified seed companies in Africa.

The AATF owns the licensing rights and has registered the TELA hybrid in South Africa and is leading the applicatio­ns for the regulatory approvals for commercial release of the GM traits in the other project countries, including Nigeria.

How seed companies will be involved

The AATF as the sub-licensor has set up a review process to identify and decide the companies’ merit licensing based on standard criteria designed to be as inclusive as possible.

The Project will license seed companies to access the technology, royalty-free for them to produce and sell the seed brand to farmers at prevailing market prices.. The partnershi­p helps build technical breeding and biotechnol­ogy capacity, as well as support effective seed systems in Africa.

The TELA Maize Project is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) and the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID).

Prof Ado Yusuf, the executive director, IAR, expressed satisfacti­on with the release of the new four maize varieties, saying, “The IAR is very proud of our scientists who are addressing the maize productivi­ty challenges in the country and beyond.

“These varieties have undergone thorough research and have been developed using the tools of biotechnol­ogy over years of continuous testing and revalidati­on.”

Also speaking, Dr Canisius Kanangire, the executive director of the AATF said, “The release of TELA Maize in Nigeria will contribute to food and nutrition security in line with the federal government’s agricultur­al transforma­tion agenda.”

The AATF reaffirms unwavering commitment to addressing challenges faced by farmers across the continent.

Professor Garba Sharubutu, the executive secretary, Agricultur­al Research Council of Nigeria (ARCN), said the approval of the TELA Maize variety in Nigeria was a critical milestone that confirms the potential of biotechnol­ogy in ensuring food and nutrition security, and improved livelihood of farming households in Africa.

Prof Mustapha Abdullahi, the director-general, National Biotechnol­ogy Developmen­t Agency (NABDA), celebrated the release, saying that with the advent of TELA Maize, farmers will reduce the use of pesticides on maize, which is beneficial to humans, livestock and the environmen­t.

Dr Sylvester Oikeh, the TELA Maize Project manager, celebrated the decision by Nigeria by calling on other countries in Africa to act for farmers.

“I am encouraged by this decision by the Federal Government of Nigeria that reflects their commitment to the needs of farmers,” he said.

He congratula­ted the scientists for hard work and dedication that has seen the product getting closer to farmers and look forward to other countries making similar decisions for the good of the farmer.

The AATF is an internatio­nal not-for-profit organisati­on empowering smallholde­r farmers across Sub-Saharan Africa with a wide choice of agricultur­al innovation­s that contribute to food and nutrition security to generate health and wealth for their families and communitie­s.

 ?? ?? Tela maize havest during field trials
Tela maize havest during field trials

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