Striga is an indigenous parasitic weed that attacks cereals and other crops in Africa. In maize croplands alone, Striga infests over 2.3 million ha resulting in 1.6 million tons of grain loss worth US $383 million annually. An innovative approach to controlling the parasite was to induce herbicide resistance in maize and to coat the seed with herbicide to provide chemical protection from infection. This breakthrough that was realized after 12 years of collaborative research and development by the International Maize and Wheat Centre (CIMMYT), the Kenya Agricultural Research Center (KARI) and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, is now ready for deployment in Sub-Saharan Africa. This effort is most advanced in Kenya, where one va...
This paper focuses on the impact of Striga spp. on maize production and the use of biotechnology (e....
Open Access Journal; Published online: 17 Mar 2020Use of small doses of imazapyr and pyrithiobac for...
Striga, a parasitic weed of most savannah crops, is gaining ground in Africa and farmers have only l...
Striga is an indigenous parasitic weed that attacks cereals and other crops in Africa. In maize crop...
Dipping maize seeds in a very small amount of herbicide blocks the ability of Striga hermonthica to ...
Striga is an obligate parasitic weed attacking cereal crops in Subsaharan Africa. In Western Kenya, ...
Striga is an obligate parasitic weed attacking cereal crops in Subsaharan Africa. In Western Keny, i...
Striga hermonthica (witchweed) is a parasitic weed that attacks and significantly reduces the yields...
Africa has 75 million hectares of land that can grow cereals, but two-thirds of it is now infested w...
Parasitic weed, Striga spp infect million hectares of arable land in Africa and become a major threa...
Striga hermonthica, or striga as it is commonly known, is a pernicious parasitic weed that affects m...
The parasitic weed Striga (Striga spp.) is an important constraint to crop production in Africa. Cro...
The parasltie flowering plants, Striga species, represent the largest biological constraint to cerea...
The parasitic weed species Striga asiatica, also known as witch weed, is one of the major constraint...
Witch weed ( Striga (genus) is a major constraint to cereal production in sub-Saharan Africa. A ne...
This paper focuses on the impact of Striga spp. on maize production and the use of biotechnology (e....
Open Access Journal; Published online: 17 Mar 2020Use of small doses of imazapyr and pyrithiobac for...
Striga, a parasitic weed of most savannah crops, is gaining ground in Africa and farmers have only l...
Striga is an indigenous parasitic weed that attacks cereals and other crops in Africa. In maize crop...
Dipping maize seeds in a very small amount of herbicide blocks the ability of Striga hermonthica to ...
Striga is an obligate parasitic weed attacking cereal crops in Subsaharan Africa. In Western Kenya, ...
Striga is an obligate parasitic weed attacking cereal crops in Subsaharan Africa. In Western Keny, i...
Striga hermonthica (witchweed) is a parasitic weed that attacks and significantly reduces the yields...
Africa has 75 million hectares of land that can grow cereals, but two-thirds of it is now infested w...
Parasitic weed, Striga spp infect million hectares of arable land in Africa and become a major threa...
Striga hermonthica, or striga as it is commonly known, is a pernicious parasitic weed that affects m...
The parasitic weed Striga (Striga spp.) is an important constraint to crop production in Africa. Cro...
The parasltie flowering plants, Striga species, represent the largest biological constraint to cerea...
The parasitic weed species Striga asiatica, also known as witch weed, is one of the major constraint...
Witch weed ( Striga (genus) is a major constraint to cereal production in sub-Saharan Africa. A ne...
This paper focuses on the impact of Striga spp. on maize production and the use of biotechnology (e....
Open Access Journal; Published online: 17 Mar 2020Use of small doses of imazapyr and pyrithiobac for...
Striga, a parasitic weed of most savannah crops, is gaining ground in Africa and farmers have only l...