The new app “Btbegun” provides farmers, extension professionals, field officers, policymakers, seed suppliers and other stakeholders with the most current information about Bt eggplant — a genetically engineered variety resistant to a ravenous insect that destroys crops in the field before harvest.
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- Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology Section
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The free app, developed by the Feed the Future South Asia Eggplant Improvement Partnership, launched Sept. 15 in the Google play store. An iPhone version is under development.
“Bt eggplant farmers rely on precise, timely information to make numerous decisions about everything they do,” said Maricelis Acevedo, project director and researcher in Cornell University’s Department of Global Development.
“This app puts the latest and most scientifically informed data at their fingertips to help them produce the safe, high-quality food the public needs,” she said.
The app provides a wealth of information on Bt eggplant. Users can access information about the technology; tips for planting, growing, stewardship and harvesting; and video tutorials. A FAQ section will dispel common myths surrounding Asia’s only genetically engineered food crop.
More than 30,000 farmers in Bangladesh cultivated Bt eggplant varieties in the last season. First grown in 2014, Bt eggplant is resistant to the eggplant fruit and shoot borer, a devastating caterpillar pest that reduces the yield and makes the fruit unmarketable. Traditional eggplant varieties require regular and expensive insecticide spraying during the growing season, with major impacts to the environment and farmer health.
Studies conducted in Bangladesh have shown the public accepts Bt eggplant in the market and documented that farmers growing the genetically engineered crop earned more revenue, produced significantly higher yields and reduced insecticide spraying compared to traditional varieties.
“Bt eggplant is bringing big economic and health benefits to farmers across Bangladesh, and this new app will give farmers a valuable new source of information at a time when COVID-19 concerns are disrupting the ways farmers share and obtain expert advice,” said Vijay Paranjape, vice president for life sciences advisory at Sathguru Management Consultants, which co-developed the app along with Cornell and the Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (BARI).
Mobile phones are increasingly important and widely used tools for farmers. With the new app, smartphone users get an interactive experience with information and expert advice across the entire farming chain, from seed purchasing to planting to harvesting. Those with regular mobile phones can access some features through a pared-down version that will enable customized text messages.
At the time of its release, about 30,000 Bt eggplant-growing farmers and other stakeholders will already be registered in the app. The interactive app has features for farmers to ask experts from the BARI questions and share images from the field. The app tracks input details about area planted, sowing dates, seed source and harvest, and will provide training material for extension officials to use with local farmers.
The app was formally launched Sept. 15 by Md. Nazirul Islam, BARI director general, and now is being used by select user groups in Bangladesh before it is made widely available.
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