“We’ve come a long way since
we met two years ago,” says Kevin Pixley at the HarvestPlus
meeting in Brazil.
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The Color Orange: Key to More Nutritious Maize?
The HarvestPlus Maize group examines progress
toward breeding maize with enhanced pro-vitamins A, iron, and zinc.
CIMMYT maize scientists and colleagues from national
programs in the key countries targeted by HarvestPlus reported significant
progress in identifying maize with elevated concentrations of iron,
zinc, and pro-vitamins A (chemicals the human body can convert to
vitamin A) in their elite maize varieties and germplasm collections.
The results of two years of work were presented at the second HarvestPlus
Maize meeting hosted by EMBRAPA, the national agricultural research
program of Brazil at their maize and sorghum research station in
Sete Lagoas.
Maize is a key target crop for nutritional enhancement
because it is so widely consumed in areas where high malnutrition—especially
vitamin-A deficiency—exists. Scientists working in the HarvestPlus
program hope eventually to breed high-quality, high-yielding maize
with enhanced pro-vitamins A, iron, and zinc content. These micronutrients
in maize will have to be in a form that survives processing and
can be utilized by the human body.
The first planning meeting for the maize scientists
was held in 2003 in Ethiopia. “We’ve come a long way
since we first met two years ago,” says Kevin Pixley, the
HarvestPlus Maize coordinator and Director of CIMMYT’s Tropical
Ecosystems Program. “But we have also realized that this is
a very complex subject with many assumptions that have to be validated.”
CIMMYT maize breeder Dave Beck (left) examines
EMBRAPA maize during a field visit. |
CIMMYT maize breeder Dave Beck showed the group results
of screening of CIMMYT elite highland and transition zone maize
germplasm for enhanced levels of pro-vitamins A, zinc, and iron.
HarvestPlus nutritionists have set minimum targets for the concentrations
of these micronutrients in maize. The good news is that for zinc,
CIMMYT has identified material that was already above the threshold.
For iron the picture is less promising as existing lines identified
have only 60 percent of the required minimum level for iron. For
pro-vitamins A CIMMYT has examined hundreds of lines. The best CIMMYT
lines have about 75 percent of the minimum requirement, but sources
identified by project partners in the USA have the minimum required
level of pro-vitamins A. The CIMMYT team is now breeding to enhance
pro-vitamins A concentration for highland, transition zone, mid-altitude,
and lowland-adapted materials.
A topic of keen interest at the meeting was how to
convince people to adopt any nutritionally enhanced maize varieties
that might be developed. In much of eastern and southern Africa,
white maize is preferred over yellow maize. Scientists in Zambia
and Zimbabwe had conducted studies about the acceptability of yellow
maize. Both studies found that yellow maize is associated with food
aid and that was one reason people did not want to eat it. Scientists
know there is a strong correlation between the color of the maize
and the total level of carotenoids. Some of these carotenoids are
precursors for vitamin A “pro-vitamins A.” Torbert Rocheford,
a professor of plant genetics at the University of Illinois, suggested
that the debate should not actually be about yellow maize in many
parts of Africa. He said what we should be talking about is orange
maize—something new that will not carry the stigma of yellow
maize but will have high pro-vitamins A content.
For further information, contact Kevin Pixley
(k.pixley@cgiar.org).
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